Having spent about 150 hours playing Starfield when it came out, I genuinely felt good about the general state of the game for a while. Then, Shattered Space came out and fell flat on its face, and I decided to waitš“ it out as Bethesda šcontinued improving things. Alas, silence.
Itās early 2025, and Bethesdaās been awfully mum about Starfield. Though ahead of Shattered Spaceās release that more DLCs would be coming in 2025 and onwards, the fact of the matter is that the studioās hype machine just kind of died down. Whether thatās because Shattered Space didnāt review well at all, or because thereās simply nothing else to show off, the end result is much the same.
Hereās the thing: up until Shattered Spaceās release, Starfield was trucking along at a reasonably brisk pace. Updates were coming in at a very satisfying pace, and frankly, game-changing content additions such as REV-8 were being dished out left and right. During this time, I played Starfield as a strange continuation of my Destiny experience (as weird as that might sound), and the š¬promise of things to come kept me entertained throughout.

Then, Shattered Space failed to deliver on the promise of a meaningful new expansion to the core Starfield gameplay experience, and players largely moved on to greener pastures. In my case, that was STALKER 2, which is admittedly a strange comparison to draw upon. Then came Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 with its oddly Morrowind-like gameplay loop that Iām hoping Bethesda takes a good long look at for TES 6.
My point is that Starfield kind of missed its opportunity to truly make a mark on the gaming industry. Worse, Bethesdaās support for its long-awaited, highly anticipated flagship RPG is now virtually nonexistent. Iām not saying Bethesdaās not working on stuff in the background, of course. Iām sure weāll get a few more content updates and, perhaps, an extra expansion pack down the line. But the hype behind this entire shtick is effectively gone, and Iām not sure if it can ever be regained at this point.
The timeline isnāt looking great, honestly: itās been about 16 months since Starfield was released as of February 2025. In that time, weāve received a huge amount of patches, a frankly astonishing number of paid mods, and a single substantial expansion pack of questionable quality. Compare that to, say, Fallout 4. In just over a year and a half, Fallout 4 received sixš¹ official DLCs, three of which were genuinely compelling expansion packs.
With Fallout 4, Bethesda was able and willing to maintain a solid and engaging content release schedule, which helped prop the game up over and over again as months went on. With Starfield, in comparison, it feels like Bethesda just gave up halfway through, and weāre all left wondering what on earth the next step for it will be.

The way things are, maybe itās for the best if Bethesda really does just move on to Fallout 5 and The Elder Scrolls 6. Itās a massive shame that Starfield is in the state itās in, but Iāve come to believe patches and improvements just wonāt be enough to prop it up to the same level as Bethesdaās other properties. Thereās something important missing from Starfieldās core gameplay loop, and no type of fancy new content can compensate for that.
On the topic of Bethesdaās future releases, though, hereās some food for thought: Starfieldās Creations ecosystem has overtaken the good old Nexus Mods platform in popularity a good long while ago. This might not have seemed like a notable problem a while back, but now weāre looking at a situation where a huge chunk of Starfieldās best mod content is locked behind in-game purchases. Itās not a great look, and it may well end up disposing of the gameās modding community in due time. Iām still hoping Bethesda will correct course with its next project, if not with Starfield, but given that Todd Howard is now busier than ever, Iāve got my doubts.
Doubts, then, are all weāve got since Bethesda doesnāt want to speak out about its plans for Starfield. In the best-case scenario, this is just a practical application of the things we learned from . There, Spencer said that Howard questioned whether the release of substantial content additions, such as the aforementioned REV-8, shouldāve been tied to the DLC rather than a standalone update.
āI think some of the feedback on the expansion is: āWe wanted more features.ā And heās like, āWell, should we have waited to put buggies out,ā Howard told Spencer.
So, Bethesda might be biding its time until itās got a massive chunk of Starfield goodness ready to launch. Will it matter, though? Weāll just have to wait and see, but itās not looking great.
Published: Feb 16, 2025 2:18 PM UTC