
Console Domination writes: Starting off in 1999, Driver has been just one of those franchises that seem to polarise players, creating a perpetual love-it or hate-it vibe. The original introduced the free-roaming, mission based driving action you see perpetuated today in many open-world games including the mighty Grand Theft Auto and Saint's Row. As the series progressed however, it evolved with the developer Ubisoft Reflections tweaking the game play to include a vast array of different mechanics for each of the six follow-up titles in an attempt to hit some kind of invisible sweet spot and not always succeeding. With Driver: San Francisco, they have promised to strip out the lack lustre features of some of the recent titles and focus entirely on what the series started with – driving.

Game Designer Andrew Willans looks back at Driver: San Francisco’s legacy.
Now we get The Crew games instead 🙄
Would love and much prefer a sequel to this.

Ubisoft seems to have teased a new Driver game, with the company's CEO pointing to various projects being in development.

Immersed Gamer writes: "Ubisoft came out with the announcement that some of their classic titles are shutting down their servers. While this is not entirely surprising, the next bit is quite shocking. As Ubisoft states in regard to many of said classic games, “additionally, the installation and access to DLC will be unavailable”.
The wording is a little vague, so the actual paid DLC could be safe. But it doesn’t change the fact that multiplayer modes of Assassin’s Creed Brotherhood, Rayman Legends, and Driver San Francisco will surely be missed. Especially since no alternative exists in many of those cases. This happens to unveil right next to our story where I essentially beg Atlus to port SMT to modern consoles alongside Persona.
Seems like videogame preservation is on the down-low…"
And you want us to go all digital? This is the bull sh*t that makes me apprehensive to an all digital future. You corpo guys don’t understand game preservation or it’s importance.
Companies who withdraw support should be legally made to patch games to enable the 'owner' to create and host their own MP lobbies. This is theft