After reporting significant drops in revenue and operating profit in the previous fiscal quarter, Remedy is shifting development resources from FBC: Firebreak to “other in-development titles.” It’s still “respecting our communicated roadmap,” but if this isn’t a prelude to ending support after the major update in March 2026, we don’t know what is.
Other highly anticipated projects, such as Control 2 and Max Payne 1 and 2 Remake, are still in the “full production” stage with no firm release dates. However, even more interesting is that there’s a project that’s entered the Proof of Concept stage. Nothing else is known – Remedy doesn’t even make mention of it in its January-September 2025 Business Review.
Yet it is the publisher, and as per the Game Projects section on its Investors website, it’s keen on self-publishing titles where it owns the IP. It names Control and Alan Wake as its two established franchises, and it feels that growing and expanding these will be a “key part” of its future. Place your bets on which side of the Remedy-verse this new project could fall under, though it’s probably cooling off on multiplayer offerings for a while.
If it’s any consolation for the developer, it saw a strong increase in game sales in royalties from Control (which sold over five million units last August), Alan Wake 2 and subscription service agreements from FBC: Firebreak.

