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Well, folks, it seems the Zeds have won this round. Killing Floor 3, just weeks away from launch, has been unceremoniously dragged back to the lab for some serious reconstructive surgery. A disastrous closed beta, overflowing with bugs, glitches, and questionable design choices, forced Tripwire Interactive to delay the game until later in 2025. In their own words: "We missed the mark." No kidding.
The closed beta wasn't just a test; it was a public execution. Players, expecting a visceral horror experience, were instead greeted by a futuristic sci-fi setting that felt about as terrifying as a disco ball. The carnage was widespread:
Performance Meltdown: Forget hordes of Zeds; the real enemy was the constant crashing, stuttering framerates, and optimization issues that turned co-op into a slideshow of suffering. It was like trying to run a modern game on a potato powered by hopes and dreams.
Gunplay Malfunction: The satisfying BOOM of a well-placed shotgun blast was replaced with the pathetic fizzle of unresponsive controls and animations so janky they'd make a Scrakes's limp look like a ballet performance.
Horror? More Like Error: The futuristic setting sucked the horror out of the room faster than a Cyst's bile attack. What should have been a desperate fight for survival felt like a generic sci-fi shooter with a slightly higher-than-average body count.
Tripwire, to their credit, didn't try to sugarcoat the disaster. They admitted their missteps and promised to recapture the "survival horror spirit" while still, somehow, clinging to their futuristic vision. A bold strategy, Cotton, let's see if it pays off.
The developers are now in full damage control mode, promising to address the beta's laundry list of issues, including performance, UI/UX, lighting, and the tragically disappointing weapon feel. A long-requested feature – separate perk class and character selection – is also in the pipeline, though not at launch. Meanwhile, refunds are being issued to those who've wisely decided to abandon ship. U.S. PlayStation users get an in-game prompt (ignore it, and you'll be automatically refunded). Everyone else (non-U.S. or non-PlayStation) gets an automatic refund, except on Steam, where you'll have to manually request it. Killing Floor earned its bloody reputation with its unique blend of chaotic co-op and gut-churning horror. This latest entry's near-fatal stumble has left fans reeling. Tripwire's delay is a desperate gamble – a last-ditch effort to save the game from becoming another failed experiment. The extra time is a lifeline. It's a chance to banish the bugs, inject some genuine horror into the sterile sci-fi setting, and polish the gameplay to a bloody shine. Will they succeed? Only time will tell if Killing Floor 3 can be brought back from the brink or if it's destined to remain flatlined.
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