Remedy Lists Unannounced New Project While Shifting Resources Away From FBC: Firebreak

As Remedy promises to respect its "communicated roadmap" for Firebreak, a new project has entered the Proof of Concept stage.

After reporting significant drops in revenue and operating profit in the previous fiscal quarter, Remedy is shifting development resources from FBC: Firebreak to “other in-development titles.” It’s still “respecting our communicated roadmap,” but if this isn’t a prelude to ending support after the major update in March 2026, we don’t know what is.

Other highly anticipated projects, such as Control 2 and Max Payne 1 and 2 Remake, are still in the “full production” stage with no firm release dates. However, even more interesting is that there’s project that’s entered the Proof of Concept stage. Nothing else is known – Remedy doesn’t even make mention of it in its January-September 2025 Business Review.

Yet it is the publisher, and as per the Game Projects section on its Investors website, it’s keen on self-publishing titles where it owns the IP. It names Control and Alan Wake as its two established franchises, and it feels that growing and expanding these will be a “key part” of its future. Place your bets on which side of the Remedy-verse this new project could fall under, though it’s probably cooling off on multiplayer offerings for a while.

If it’s any consolation for the developer, it saw a strong increase in game sales in royalties from Control (which sold over five million units last August), Alan Wake 2 and subscription service agreements from FBC: Firebreak.

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