
Hardcore Gamer: You probably don't remember me on account of all the bullets, rockets, and noise. I'm your Technician. Or at least I was in the last few matches of Hawken that we played together. As your Technician, it was my duty to heal you and the other members of our team so that we could all embrace each other in the cold robotic arms of victory. I typically take great pride in my role as your Technician and try to perform at a level generally referred to as “not sucking it up.” This was made extremely difficult however, by the rapidly deteriorating nature of our relationship in the last few matches when you expressed nothing but disdain for my very existence.

Expect the game to only work offline right now.

As we trend ever deeper into a world of games that require servers maintained by the developer or publisher, we see more and more games disappearing from the world. What happens when these games are shut down? What does it take for a game to survive beyond this point?
Most modern games that have online components like destiny rely so heavily on co op between players that even if you had a full disc version popping it in and playing won't be a fun experience as you can't play the actual game after hitting a wall with difficulty levels of they even boot
But classic titles like vice city will still be the same in 2049 as they were in 2001 provided you play on a disc not stripped down digital versions that have the soundtrack cut out ten years later

Hawken, the free to play mech shooter has had its servers closed on Steam, but it will remain live on consoles.
This is exactly why only online multiplayer games won't last very long. It's important to have a single player campaign (a good one, not a throw-away trash story) or some kind of offline multiplayer mode.