The Battle Royale behemoth has claimed the life of Epic's MOBA before it ever really took off.
Though never available on the Xbox One, Epic Games' MOBA, Paragon, built a fairly dedicated community of players on PC and on PS4. Now, though, the sun has set, the curtain has closed and Paragon is being shut down on April 26.
The official release (via Kotaku) doesn't really mention the true underlying reasons behind the shut down though.
After careful consideration, and many difficult internal debates, we feel there isn't a clear path for us to grow Paragon into a MOBA that retains enough players to be sustainable.
We didn't execute well enough to deliver on the promise of Paragon. We have failed you -- despite the team's incredibly hard work -- and we're sorry.
Less than two weeks ago, a member of the Paragon team took to Reddit for an 'open discussion' on where they were at with Paragon. And it became clear immediately that the massive success of Fortnite since launching the Battle Royale mode has lead to many of the Paragon team being redeployed.
With over 40 million players across three platforms, Fortnite Battle Royale has grown at an incredible rate, even with PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds running alongside it. Battle Royale is getting bigger every day, so it's understandable that Epic would have to prioritize.
More: Fortnite Battle Royale's 2.0 map update makes everything better
That doesn't make Paragon players feel any better, though. They've got until April 26 to keep on playing though it's likely player counts will start to dwindle following the announcement of its closure. What is good news for Paragon players is that any money they've spent on the game (it's free to play with in-game purchases) will be refunded in full by Epic Games
To try to make this right, Epic is offering a full refund to every Paragon player for every purchase on any platform. This refund will come directly from Epic rather than your platform provider.
Full details on the closure and how to get your money back can be found on the Epic Games blog.