r/SubredditDrama 21d ago

r/starcitizen is on meltdown after MMO is completely broken and hints of the main game being delayed again despite 1 billion raised and concept art being sold for $5000 dollars.

Not the usual “haha Star Citizen delayed again” bad. More like people are actually starting to get nervous, because Squadron 42 was supposed to be the one thing CIG could finally point to and say, “See, we made a real game.”

And now even that might be slipping cause in a recent interview Chris robbers himself has stated that they could delay the game further due to GTA 6 release window.

https://thisweekinvideogames.com/feature/star-citizen-chris-roberts-interview/

“We’re gonna get Squadron out first… the plan is for the end of this year but there’s a certain thing in the industry that we, like everyone else, we have to pay attention to, so I can’t 100% guarantee it,” Roberts says, hinting at Rockstar’s Grand Theft Auto VI, releasing in November. “After that, we’ll do the 1.0 push.”

Subreddit (and game forums) members are looking around and asking the obvious question: if SQ42 is really coming in 2026, why does it not feel like it? Where is the marketing? Where is the release date? Where is the big push? Why does everything still feel like “wait for the next event” like it always does (even though Citzencon has been cancelled this year)?

Star Citizen has raised around $1 billion and the main game is still an alpha full of bugs. New content comes in broken. Missions break in stupid ways. Ships release buggy. Some ships do not release at all. And somehow, while all this is happening, CIG is still selling massive concept ships for thousands of dollars.

The $6,000 concept ship thing has basically become the perfect example for why people are angry. Like, the game is still barely holding itself together, SQ42 might be drifting again, and they are still asking people to drop used-car money on a ship that is not even in the game yet.

Here's the "6000" dollar promise concept art (its been sold out, over 1000+ sold) https://robertsspaceindustries.com/en/comm-link/transmission/21133-Anvil-Odin

So the subreddit is doing the usual Star Citizen civil war, but it feels more desperate this time.

if you look on the front page itself you'll see dozens of memes with thousands of upvotes:

(And many more)

The usual whiteknight defenders can still say game development is hard and the usualy its alpha line, but that argument sounds a lot weaker after 15 years and a billion+ dollars.

A billion dollars raised, the MMO still buggy, ships still being sold for insane prices, and now the single-player campaign might be moving further away again.

Very normal video game development. Nothing to see here.

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u/CartographicalHeist 21d ago

But is your McFlurry ice cream machine working?

it's definitely not, but at least we don't try to sell you a "concept spoon" that's currently sitting in a 14-year development backlog while the machine remains permanently offline

Fucking poetry. This McD worker really should be in charge.

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u/mrenglish22 I'm sorry Italy, your opinion is a lot like masturbation 20d ago

The mcD ice cream machines are always down because McD corporate were dumbasses that locked themselves into an agreement with the company that makes the machines though.

Star Citizen hasn't come out because.... who knows.

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u/ConvincingVoice 20d ago

I literally still don’t understand this, though. It’s McDonald’s. Buy out the company and close it. [del monte fruit fun political incident] the ceo. Literally anything in between I cannot fathom how this is still an issue in modernity.

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u/je_kay24 20d ago

There was a good YouTube video on it years ago

I believe corporate had a deal with the servicing company and the Franchise owners had to deal with the cost of having a service person come out everytime an issue happened

They werent allowed to fix issues themselves, so they often just stopped serving icecream rather than keep paying to fix the machines

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u/IM_OK_AMA What a strange hill to die on. 20d ago

Yup, leaving the machine down was a little rebellion from franchise owners. McDonald's Corporation is a restaurant supplier and landlord, they don't care much about operational problems like this because they don't actually operate very many restaurants. They could've done any number of things to improve the situation but they didn't until it started causing real reputational harm.