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System Shock 3 is still alive, and updates could surface within the next year.

We last wrote about immersive sim sequel System Shock 3 back in 2020, when then-developers Otherside sold the franchise to megapublisher Tencent. Development of the series later passed to remaster specialists Nightdive Studios, who’ve already overhauled the first game and are currently working on a remaster of System Shock 2 for release in June.

Now, NightDive have popped up with news that the System Shock 3 project survives, in some form, and that we could get clarification as to its status “potentially within a year”. Don’t call it a comeback, do call it a sign of life.

“The situation around System Shock 3 is very complicated,” Nightdive’s director of business development Larry Kuperman hedged at GDC this week, in comments published by VGC.

Can we expect a proper update anytime soon? “Not as yet, not as yet,” Kuperman went on. “I don’t know when it’s going to clarify, but it could potentially be within a year. It could be, or it could take longer. That said, what I can say is that we have visions of what we can do within what we control.

“You’re going to see a remaster of System Shock 2,” he added. “I’ve been asked twice earlier today why we didn’t do a remake, and I said, ‘are you somehow under the impression that because we do a remaster that we won’t be able to do a remake in the future?’ That might be something that I can either confirm or deny. But there’s going to be content coming out.”

So there’s your bonus headline here: Nightdive might do a System Shock 2 remake after the remaster. Asked about the future of the series beyond retreads of the existing games, Kuperman said: “We’ll see what happens. I mean, there’s stuff that we can do within the first and the second.” Some expansions then?

It’s all very… non-enlightening. But I’m happy with any sign that System Shock has a future beyond high-fi retreads of the classics, and Nightdive seem like they could hack a threequel. In our review of their System Shock remake, Jeremy Peel called it “a breathtakingly beautiful and astonishingly faithful remake that proves the enduring power of Looking Glass design.”

Jeremy’s also got an interview with Nightdive detailing how the studio got their hands on the license, beginning with a phone chat with an insurance company and ending with Nightdive’s acquisition by Atari.

As for Otherside – the studio co-founded by original System Shock devs Paul Neurath and Warren Spector – they’re currently working on a new immersive sim, Thick As Thieves.


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