Ubisoft Responds to Call of Juarez: Gunslinger Delisting

Ubisoft Responds to Call of Juarez: Gunslinger Delisting

Points to Techland.

LizardRock by LizardRock on Apr 13, 2018 @ 07:37 AM (Staff Bios)
Comment(s)
A while back, we noticed that Call of Juarez: Gunslinger and Call of Juarez: The Cartel disappeared from digital markets. While we speculated remasters and license shifts, only now to do we have a followup on the actual reason why.

Michael Beadle, Director of public relations at Ubisoft, has provided an official statement:

Per the terms of agreement, Call of Juarez The Cartel and Call of Juarez Gunslinger licensing/publishing rights have reverted back to Techland, while others remain active with Ubisoft. This is why a few titles have recently been removed from STEAM but it is our understanding that Techland is working to bring those titles back, so please feel free to reach out to Techland re status.


This is a common process for game's shifting license owners. We have reached out to Techland for a statement, but it's safe to assume we will see the series returning to digital marketplaces soon enough.

Comments

Comment on this Article in our Forum

More GamerzUnite News

Are We Being Controlled in a PC Game by Aliens?

Are We Being Controlled in a PC Game by Aliens?

New UFO Film proposes we might!

February 19 @ 02:23 PM
Explore an Eerie Archipelago in Dredge

Explore an Eerie Archipelago in Dredge

A fishing adventure gone bad...

February 11 @ 03:07 PM
Automation Goes Too Far in The Last Worker

Automation Goes Too Far in The Last Worker

A bleak future for anyone looking for a job...

September 2 @ 01:11 AM
Alien Infestation takes over in From Space

Alien Infestation takes over in From Space

Liberate the Earth in this fun new action-shooter...

August 27 @ 09:50 PM
August 27 @ 09:14 PM
Join GamerzUnite and Unite with other Gamerz.
A Piece of Our Mind

Every Single Detail We Found in the Starfield Gameplay Reveal

Video Games Shouldn't Need Wiki Pages

PopSlinger Review: It Goes Down Rough, Really Rough

Halo: Infinite Highlights Everything Wrong with Gaming Today

Echo Generation Review: Not Exactly a Blockbuster