It has not been smooth sailing for Bungie's reboot since it was revealed in March 2023 with a . After two years of questions and uncertainty, PC Gamer's resident Bungie whisperer Tim Clark declared it "" after getting hands-on time with it in April. But he had significant concerns nonetheless, "from a spooked Sony, to the inherently hostile nature of the genre, and Bungie's own chequered history with Destiny's live service model, monetisation, and especially PvP balancing." And with the game now just three months away—it's currently set to launch on September 23—there's a low-key but persistent expectation that it will be delayed.
PlayStation Studios chief Hermen Hulst indicated no such movement during a recent "," however, saying that Sony continues to see live service games as a "great opportunity," even as he acknowledged that they're faced with "unique challenges" as well.
"We've introduced much more rigorous processes for validating—for revalidating our creative, our commercial, our development assumptions and hypotheses, and we now do that on a much more ongoing basis," Hulst said. "That's the plan that will yono all app ensure we're investing in the right opportunities at the right time, all while maintaining much more predictable timelines."
But, acknowledging again that this showcase is for investors and not gamers, the focus here is not how awesome Marathon is going to be, but how Sony is going all-out to ensure it doesn't end up with another Concord debacle on its hands.
"The constant testing and the constant re-validation of assumptions that we just talked about, to me is just so valuable to iterate and to constantly improve the title," Hulst said. "So when launch comes, we're gonna give the title the optimal chance of success."
Which is good, because Marathon needs to be an unqualified success for Bungie: Destiny 2 is a fading flower, and Sony's impatience with the studio's floundering is becoming . A report in May said following an art theft fiasco, and an apparently widespread belief among employees that a Marathon failure could spell the end of the studio.
In a , Sony still pegs Marathon for release in its 2025 fiscal year. That doesn't preclude a delay, though: Sony's FY25 doesn't end until March 31, 2026.