Summary

A recent Ubisoft press release confirmed the active development ofThe Division 3, slotted to come out at some point afterThe Division Heartland, which still has its tentative release window in 2023. From what has been shown of the latter, the two games are being developed with separate areas of focus in design, able to coexist harmoniously, with the outing from Red Storm Entertainment having the potential to be far more than a holdover between main entries inThe Division.

The Division fan base had mixed reactions to the initial announcement ofThe Division Heartland. A more PvPvE-centric entry in the franchise with shades of the beloved Survival game mode fromThe Division, it marks Red Storm Entertainment’s first chance to take the lead on a project based in the world after aiding Massive Entertainment’s development of the first two. The drastic setting shift from urban to rural paired with its leaning into the Dark Zone’s gameplay loop could prove a winning formula, but with the extraction shooter trend hinting at a fever pitch and nowunder the shadow ofThe Division 3,The Division Heartlandwill need to set itself apart for any chance at staying power.

Huddled Hologram Division Heartland

RELATED:Ubisoft Finally Shares More Details About The Division Heartland

The Division 3 Does Not Have to Usurp Heartland

Despite the lack of concrete information, there is plenty to draw from in guessing what shapeThe Division 3will take. More than likely set in an American metropolis, maybe Chicago or Los Angeles this time around, the game will have its players take the role of SHD sleeper agents to pick up the wreckage of a societal collapse following a bioterrorism attack. Given the partition of the former game’sPvPvE elements honed intoThe Division Heartland, it is not wild to assumeThe Division 3will prioritize its narrative and endgame PvE. Though unlikely, it is entirely possible that it foregoes the Dark Zone entirely, coexisting withThe Division Heartlandto provide players with more robust versions of both gameplay styles.

Two years after the release ofThe Division 2, there was some consternation from fans reacting to the 2021 announcement ofThe Division Heartland, with its timing suggesting the offshoot title would mark a change in direction for the franchise. At that point, the forecast forThe Division 3was nebulous and the fear withThe Division Heartlandwas that Ubisoft might have shelved it in favor of chasing trends. The anxiety was compounded by Massive Entertainment’s slate seemingly full withStar Wars Outlawsand its presumptive sequels. Now officially revealed,The Division 3lessens thescrutiny thatThe Division Heartlandhas faced, allowing it to exist as a genre experiment that will not have to bear the weight of being a mainline entry.

Ruined Street Division Heartland

The Division Heartland’s Success Will Hinge on Finding Its Identity

The Division 3is years off, with the lack of an accessible platform announcement placing its release as far as 2028. If that is the case, and players will be waiting until the next console generation to get their hands on the game,The Division Heartlandis likely a strategic placeholder for the franchise as its main developer takes its hiatus to a galaxy far, far away. There is potential there, though, forThe Division Heartlandto remain relevant up throughThe Division 3’s release window, allowing the two titles to synergize. It all boils down to how Red Storm Entertainment can execute.

In an ideal scenario,The Division Heartlandwould establish itself as an extraction shooter staple, tapping into the formula that has kept players coming back to games likeEscape From TarkovandHunt: Showdownover the years. If it can succeed in that,The Division 3’s release can act as a boon to its playerbase instead of simply replacing it as the newestThe Divisiontitle. Giving the best of its high-stakes apocalyptic narrative and cutthroat PvPvE across two fronts could be the perfect ecosystem for fans ofThe Division.