

The full list of titles affected includes: Halo: Reach, Halo 4, Halo 3, Halo 3: ODST, Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary, Spartan Assault, and Halo Wars. This change also applies to backward compatibility, as “the underlying software is still the original Xbox 360 content and thus still relies on legacy online services for some functionality.” While it’s still a ways away, the vast majority of online services will go down for the games on Xbox 360 in December 2021. According to the post, “everyone is welcome to save their stats and files, however they can, if they’d like to save anything.” If you want to print out and frame that multi-kill you got in Halo 3 in 2008, now would be the time to do it. Hopefully, some of these images survive the test of time elsewhere.įortunately, Bungie made the announcement now so that players would have time to save their old player data from.
#OLD BUNGIE HALO STATS ARCHIVE#
The website also serves as an incomparable archive for some of the series’ most iconic screenshots and content. After February 9th, all those ancient player stats will be gone. Instead, they were being held there for posterity’s sake. The website hasn’t tracked any new data on these games for more than 9 years now. Amongst tons of Destiny 2 news, the post clarifies what the takedown actually means.īasically, archived player stats are going down for Halo 2, Halo 3, Halo 3: ODST, and Halo: Reach. On January 14th, Bungie announced in their “This Week at Bungie” post, that the website will permanently go down on February 9th. Player data for old school Halo games go bye-bye On top of that, multiplayer lobbies for all Xbox 360 Halo games will be taken offline in December 2021. In a huge blow to nostalgia, Bungie’s Halo website that holds a treasure trove of player-data is going down in February.
