Dying Light: The Beast was released last year for PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X|S, with developer Techland promising a last-gen version of the game as well. That’s no longer the case, as the studio says it has made the “difficult decision” to cancel the PS4 and Xbox One versions, due to the game’s visuals being too advanced for those systems to handle.
“Dying Light: The Beast was built from the ground up to take full advantage of current-generation hardware,” Techland said in a statement. “Its open world, advanced visuals, and fluid combat and traversal all depend on processing power and memory that previous-generation consoles simply cannot provide.”
Techland added that while development progressed on the last-gen versions, it came to the conclusion that the games would need to be technically compromised in a way that impacted the experience the studio sought to offer players. The developer added that it wasn’t a matter of leaving those older platforms behind, but that they could not keep up with the demands of the game. Anyone who was expecting to play Dying Light: The Beast on PS4 or Xbox One and preordered the game will be eligible for a refund.
Dying Light: The Beast isn’t the only game to pull the plug on a last-gen release. The last few years have seen numerous titles focus purely on current-gen tech and PC, like Gotham Knights and Hogwarts Legacy, while Cyberpunk 2077’s major updates and Phantom Liberty expansion skipped the older consoles as well–likely due to the game suffering from severe performance issues on those platforms.
The world of Dying Light: The Beast expanded with a free update back in March that put much more emphasis on survival. The new mode allowed players to permanently clear out zombies from zones and repopulate them with people, but the catch with the Restored Land update was that supplies would be harder to find due to them no longer respawning, containers weren’t as plentiful with goodies, and shops would charge a premium for their stock.
“Techland’s expansion turned standalone sequel winds up being the most enjoyable Dying Light so far, because it dials back the power fantasy,” Mark Delaney wrote in GameSpot’s Dying Light: The Beast review.




