Volition’s Saints Row 4 upgrade was meant to be a make-good, but it broke the game instead
Remember this year’s Saints Row (opens in new tab)? Volition would probably prefer that you didn’t, which might go some way to explaining why the studio recently decided to upgrade everyone’s copy of Saints Row 4 (opens in new tab) to its full-fat Re-elected Edition, containing all the game’s story and cosmetic DLC and even introducing cross-play between Steam, Epic, and GOG versions of the game.
Unfortunately, that upgrade seems to have backfired, and players now report a myriad of bugs with their new version of SR4. Both the Saints Row Steam forums (opens in new tab) and subreddit (opens in new tab) are filled with players complaining of broken saves, crashes, and mods failing to function. It’s also received a few hundred negative Steam reviews (opens in new tab) since the update. If it’s succeeded in washing the taste of Saints Row (2022) out of players’ mouths, it’s only because it tastes even worse.
Deep Silver, SR4’s publisher, says it’s looking into the problem, and urges anyone experiencing bugs they haven’t already seen reported to get in touch with via its website (opens in new tab). For now, a helpful Steam user has written up a guide to revert to a pre-upgrade version (opens in new tab) of the game, but be warned it’s a bit of a labour-intensive process.
It’s certainly a shame. Unlike its successor, SR4 was an excellent game. Rich McCormick scored it 90% in his Saints Row 4 review (opens in new tab) all the way back in 2013 (you know, a decade ago), complimenting its “heartfelt love for the medium” of videogames, in contrast to GTA’s filmic pretensions. Hopefully it’ll be fixed sooner rather than later. It is, after all, the last great game Volition made.
In other Volition news, the studio recently found itself folded into Gearbox (opens in new tab) after the lacklustre response to this year’s Saints Row. Volition’s parent company, Embracer Group, sold the merge as a move to give the studio an “experienced management team in the US,” and “create future success”. Not off to a great start, but in fairness, the new management has probably barely had time to get through the door.
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