In a blog post on Bethesda.net, the publisher thanks its community for their years of support and announces that, in the next few months, the Bethesda.net service will be shuttered and its functions transferred to Valve’s continuously-growing PC gaming platform Steam. According to Bethesda, this migration process will begin in April, and, though specifics are yet to come, it seems as if the publisher is taking a player-first approach to the transition.
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For many PC players, this initiative has been a long time coming. Split among Steam, GOG Galaxy, Bethesda.net, Battle.net, the Epic Games Store, and many others, PC gaming has slowly devolved into a burdensome task requiring multiple accounts, passwords, and subscriptions. Fortunately, the Bethesda.net merge will help to streamline access to fan-favorite releases, and PC gamers won’t have to endure the hassle of repeatedly logging into a completely separate service once again when the long-anticipated spacefaring RPG Starfield launches in November.
Still, the precise reason for Bethesda’s sudden sunsetting of the Bethesda.net launcher remains unknown, though it may have something to do with the recent Microsoft acquisition. Furthermore, though the launcher will be shuttered, many Bethesda games will still require a Bethesda.net account, meaning that, while PC players will be spared the trouble of signing in to a separate launcher, they’ll still need to recover their account passwords should they wish to partake in the online components of many of the publisher’s recent releases.
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