After a long wait as Ubisoft worked on the game behind closed doors, the multiplayer first-person shooter XDefiant<\/em> has finally arrived via a closed beta\u2014and it’s fired a warning shot across the bow of a titanic competitor in Call of Duty<\/em>.<\/p>
In a similar vein to how Riot garnered attention for VALORANT<\/em> up against a colossus in Counter-Strike<\/em> back in 2020, Ubisoft is leaning heavily on former pro players, influencers, and closed beta access Twitch drops<\/a> to get the word out. So far, things are going as planned, with XDefiant<\/em> outpacing Call of Duty<\/em> on Twitch when it comes to viewership.<\/p>
Between Saturday, April 15, and Tuesday, April 18, XDefiant<\/em> has amassed roughly 2.8 million hours watched on Twitch, averaged over 38,000 viewers, and came less than 200 viewers away from reaching the 100,000 max viewer mark, according to data from SullyGnome<\/a>. In contrast, Modern Warfare 2<\/em> is sitting at just 2 million hours watched and over 28,000 average viewers, and it’s worth noting those numbers are inflated by official Call of Duty<\/em> League matches (almost a quarter of the hours watched are from Scump’s co-stream alone).<\/p>
Of course, given that players can earn both closed beta access and in-game cosmetics<\/a> just by watching on Twitch, viewership numbers for XDefiant<\/em> are going to get a big boost. Additionally, there is a plethora of deep-rooted Call of Duty<\/em> streamers who are playing the closed beta, meaning that CoD’s<\/em> numbers are going to go down.<\/p>
But XDefiant<\/em> is also capitalizing on a great deal of apathy and disappointment toward Call of Duty<\/em><\/a> after a lackluster season three launch last week<\/a>. Many players have expressed their frustration with the small amount of new content and significant changes, giving XDefiant <\/em>the opportunity to capitalize.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"