bullet-run

Latest

  • Bullet Run empties its clip, shuts down servers March 8

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    02.04.2013

    Bullet Run, Sony Online Entertainment's free-to-play online shooter, will be shut down on March 8. All membership billing has been concluded as of February 1, and those with platinum memberships will receive prorated refunds for their remaining time.Though developer Acony Games will retain all of the Bullet Run game code after March 8, it has said there is "no plan" to relaunch. Even if it did, accounts would not be able to resume contiguously because SOE retains all account data once the game comes to a full stop.

  • Bullet Run shutting down on March 8th

    by 
    Matt Daniel
    Matt Daniel
    02.02.2013

    Sony Online Entertainment has announced the imminent closing of its short-lived multiplayer FPS, Bullet Run. In a post on the game's official forums, the studio announced that "after much review and consideration, Acony Games and Sony Online Entertainment have mutually made the decision to discontinue development on the free-to-play FPS game, Bullet Run." SOE will be officially sunsetting the game on March 8th, 2013. Until that time, however, the servers will remain up-and-running for any players who want to have one last hoorah before the game takes its final bow. Membership billing, however, ended yesterday, February 1st. Any players who still had time on their Platinum Memberships as of that time will receive a "pro rata refund for any time remaining on [their] Bullet Run subscription[s]" from SOE. The full details can be found on the game's official forums, and we wish the best of luck to the game's dev team in its members' future endeavors. [Thanks to Jack Pipsam for the tip!]

  • Bullet Run is free-to-play, and worth the price

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    06.13.2012

    How much do you want from free-to-play games?It's tough to talk about free-to-play games critically as a writer, because they upend the traditional rules about what video games are "worth," for lack of a better term. A traditional console game, at $60, is a fairly serious investment these days, and so there's definitely a call for insight and dialogue about how effective or interesting a certain game is on sites like these.Free-to-play games, however, are by definition free to start playing. There's no barrier to entry on a price front, so lots of other factors jump into it, from social pressure to free time available to just personal taste or quirks. In the end, it's very hard to determine just how good a game like, say, Bullet Run is, or whether it will be worth playing when it's available to the public later this year.

  • SOE announces free-to-play Bullet Run, a revamped Hedone from Acony Games

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    05.22.2012

    Acony Games, a German developer, has been working on an online first-person shooter called Hedone, about contestants fighting to win a deadly reality show. Sony Online Entertainment today announced that it is publishing a game by Acony called Bullet Run, and as far as we can tell it's Hedone with a new title.There's no mention of Hedone on the official website or in the press release, but the free-to-play shooter now called Bullet Run boasts the same reality show premise as Acony's project, and it certainly looks the same as the old game (not to mention that hedone.tv now redirects to Sony's official Bullet Run site).Some of Acony's developers previously worked on MMO flops APB and BattleForge, so the track record here isn't the greatest. But SOE apparently sees something in the title and is already trying to work some rebranding magic. Beta signups for Bullet Run are going on now, and the game is set to go live later this summer.