Destruction Allstars Delisted as Sony Cuts Multiplayer Servers Offline

Destruction Allstars Delisted as Sony Cuts Multiplayer Servers Offline

destruction allstars has been delisted from the PlayStation Store and its multiplayer servers are offline without warning. The move leaves the game’s online side unavailable while returning players can still access Arcade mode and redeem Destruction Points until 25th November 2026.

That is the sharpest turn yet for a PlayStation 5 exclusive that arrived on February 2, 2021 after first being planned as a launch title. Preorders were refunded when the game slipped into 2021, and the title later landed on PlayStation Plus, a sign Sony kept trying to widen the audience after release.

From launch delay to delisting

October 26, 2020 is the first date in the game’s public timeline that points to trouble: preorders were refunded when the release moved out of the launch window and into 2021. When the game finally arrived on February 2, 2021, Sony priced the non-PlayStation Plus version at $70, then cut it to $20 within a month. That kind of discounting usually signals a publisher trying to move inventory fast, not build long-term momentum.

2022 is the last year the game’s official feed posted on Twitter, and that silence now fits the shutdown cleanly. The game struggled to find an audience after release, and Sony had already moved it into maintenance mode before taking the servers offline. For owners, the practical split is now simple: the online component is gone, but Arcade mode still loads for returning players.

Destruction Points until 2026

25th November 2026 is the deadline Sony set for redeeming Destruction Points, but it also marks the edge of the remaining service window. Destruction Points have been removed from sale on the PlayStation Store, so the only thing still running is a limited holdover for people who already have the game. The business read is plain: Sony has stopped supporting the live economy while keeping a narrow path open for existing users.

That leaves owners with one usable mode and one fixed redemption date, which is better than a total lockout but far short of a normal live-service future. Destruction AllStars began as a launch-period PlayStation 5 bet, then spent years drifting toward maintenance, and today’s delisting turns that drift into an ending rather than a pause.

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