The first closed beta for Hell Let Loose: Vietnam was hit with technical issues that have thrown its entire enrollment pipeline in disarray and consequently prevented a significant portion of registered participants from joining the test on day one. Despite the difficulties, developer Expression Games has signaled that it’s largely thrilled with the debut beta while promising more Hell Let Loose: Vietnam tests will follow in the near future.
The British studio officially announced its upcoming title in August 2025, during Samsung’s twice-a-year Galaxies Showcase event. As the name implies, Vietnam is meant to be a direct follow-up to Expression’s merciless first-person shooter Hell Let Loose, released for PC and consoles in June 2019 and October 2021, respectively. Built on the same large-scale squad combat model that resonated with millions, Hell Let Loose: Vietnam will aim to deliver a distinctive multiplayer shooter that’s both authentic and tactically demanding. The project is currently targeting a 2026 launch, though it has yet to receive a firm release date or even window. In the meantime, Expression hosted the game’s first closed beta test, albeit with mixed results.
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Hell Let Loose: Vietnam’s First Closed Beta Marred by Sign-Up Platform Errors
Although players have been receiving email invitations to join the closed beta since April 22, many have initially struggled to do so. Central to the issue is the FirstLook platform that Expression Games used for beta registrations, which has been consistently returning internal server errors during the testing period, citing an “error verifying token 500.” A company representative confirmed that the platform had been experiencing difficulties with Hell Let Loose: Vietnam beta sign-ups on April 23, the second day of the test.
Expression cited overwhelming interest as the reason for the enrollment issues, calling the initial player response “phenomenal.” More specifically, the studio received over 100,000 applications within three days of opening registrations on April 16. For context, that is roughly as many sign-ups as the total number of likes on all versions of Hell Let Loose: Vietnam‘s 2025 reveal trailer scattered across several major YouTube channels.
Faced with the enrollment breakdown, Expression had re-sent functional FirstLook onboarding invites to affected registrants by April 23, restoring access to the closed test for many. The registration volume that triggered the failure is the clearest public measure of interest the game has generated without a major advertising push, and the sequel enters a crowded window as a tactical alternative for Battlefield 6 players seeking greater realism and squad depth. The introductory closed beta test will formally conclude tomorrow, April 27. Expression has confirmed that additional tests will follow later this year.
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The British studio has not yet shared an official beta roadmap. Even its first wave of invites arrived without any prior announcement, surprising some fans. At least one of the company’s upcoming tests is likely to be open in nature, serving as the ultimate way to stress-test its infrastructure ahead of launch. Hell Let Loose: Vietnam is one of many highly anticipated first-person shooters targeting a 2026 release, alongside Halo: Campaign Evolved, Valor Mortis, Crisol: Theater of Idols, and Rogue Core.
- Released
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2026
- Developer(s)
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Expression Games
- Multiplayer
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Online Multiplayer
- Franchise
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Hell Let Loose








