
DT:
At its very best, Turtle Rock Studios’ Evolve channels Bradbury’s time-traveling story about profoundly wealthy big game hunters on the hunt for a Tyrannosaurus Rex. The author expertly distills the horror of facing down a 14-foot tall, 40-foot long monster with nothing more than a rifle and a warped sense of machismo into one, singular moment.
The game makes you feel that sound of thunder when you and three friends track down a level three Goliath in some muddy corner of the planet Shear. Sometimes – though unfortunately not often – Evolve even lets you feel like you’re the one making that sound when you’re driving the monster and trying to best four human controlled hunters. This undeniably delicious frisson only comes occasionally and under very specific circumstances.

It has been recently revealed by an artist that a sequel to the 2015 title Evolve was in the works. However, this project wouldn't last long.
Was this game ahead of its time? A few years later games like Dead By Daylight, Friday the 13th and other asymmetrical games exploded onto the scene.

Back in 2016, Turtle Rock announced that support for its 4v1 monster-hunting shooter Evolve would end but fans wouldn't let it die.

From NME: "Evolve: Stage 2 had its multiplayer servers shut down back in 2018, but today players are once again able to matchmake and join peer-to-peer multiplayer games.
Several months ago, peer-to-peer functionality was lost for Evolve Legacy, which was the only way fans of the series could play with friends. Upon a multitude of players reaching out to publisher 2K, the issue was eventually fixed earlier in July. It seems 2K have gone a step further now, and reinstated peer-to-peer and matchmaking functionality for Evolve: Stage 2 after four years."