EA reportedly cancels another Titanfall game, lays off several hundred employees

May Be Interested In:Palworld’s next big update is a Terraria collab — something Pokémon would never do


The gaming industry continues to bleed workers and cancel games, with EA back for another round of brutal news. The company said on Tuesday it decided to “make some targeted team adjustments,” which Bloomberg reported as between 300 and 400 eliminated positions, including 100 at Respawn, and the cancellation of an unannounced Titanfall game. Again.

The canned Titanfall game, code-named R7, was reportedly an extraction shooter set in the mech-meets-parkour franchise. Bloomberg says it wasn’t close to release, and Respawn’s statement that it canceled two “early-stage incubation projects” reflects that. Details about the other scrapped game haven’t leaked, but Bloomberg reports that it was canceled earlier this year.

Respawn says it will refocus its resources on Apex Legends and Star Wars Jedi, franchises where EA appears more confident it can profit. Earlier this month, the company previewed another game set in a galaxy far, far away: the Xcom-like tactics game, Star Wars Zero Company.

After culling an estimated 1,130 jobs in 2023, EA laid off five percent of its workforce in 2024. “These decisions aren’t easy, and we are deeply grateful to every teammate affected – their creativity and contributions have helped build Respawn into what it is today,” Respawn wrote on Tuesday.

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Canadian Para cross-country skier Natalie Wilkie wins mass start gold at World Cup season opener | CBC Sports
Canadian Para cross-country skier Natalie Wilkie wins mass start gold at World Cup season opener | CBC Sports
The epic scientific quest to reveal what makes folktales so compelling
The epic scientific quest to reveal what makes folktales so compelling
China Tries to Downplay the Trade War’s Effects on Its Economy
China Tries to Downplay the Trade War’s Effects on Its Economy
British Government Takes Control of Country’s Last Major Steel Mill
British Government Takes Control of Country’s Last Major Steel Mill
Opinion: Romney's Senate exit marks an end to the bipartisanship Washington desperately needs
Opinion: Romney’s Senate exit marks an end to the bipartisanship Washington desperately needs
Nova Scotia biologist adapting COVID-19 technology to detect oyster disease | CBC News
Nova Scotia biologist adapting COVID-19 technology to detect oyster disease | CBC News
Revealing the Facts: Today's Critical Headlines | © 2025 | Daily News