10 Honest Reasons Call Of Duty Is Dying
Remember when Activision knew what the hell they were doing?
You can accuse Call of Duty for a lot of things, but 'unsuccessful' isn't one of them. As of April 2015, the series has sold over 175 million copies, making over $10 billion across 12 games, and since the release of Modern Warfare, has been the king of the FPS arena, becoming as iconic as other established franchises like Mario, Halo or FIFA. Or... maybe it's less of a Mario, and more of a Sonic? There are some deep issues within COD that are starting to kill the love we once had. The series itself is used as an example of everything that's wrong not just with modern shooters, but with the games industry as a whole. Hardcore gamers laugh at it, casual gamers are moving on, and every desperate attempt to slow its gradual decline only seems to reinforce the issue. There is still a large and loyal community and no doubt that Call of Duty will continue topping sales lists for a few more years to come, but unless there's some serious time put into remedying the various problems that risk killing off the franchise, Call of Duty has a good chance to simply slip into irrelevance. Why exactly is COD's number up? Well, let's take a look...