Embark Studios reveals massive participation in optional reset system while acknowledging design flaws that turned shooters into stockbrokers
Arc Raiders accomplished something unusual in the extraction shooter space: convincing over one million players to voluntarily delete their progress. The game’s Expedition Project system offered optional account wipes in exchange for permanent rewards, and players responded with unexpected enthusiasm.
The numbers come from Embark Studios design director Virgil Watkins in conversation with PCGamesN. What those statistics reveal extends beyond simple participation metrics—they expose both the potential and problems inherent in voluntary reset mechanics.
Extraction shooter communities maintain complicated relationships with progress wipes. Forced resets generate complaints about lost effort. No resets create insurmountable gear gaps between veterans and newcomers. Arc Raiders attempted a middle path through player-choice systems, and the response suggests genuine appetite for fresh-start opportunities when properly incentivized.
Table of Contents
Participation Numbers Exceeded Expectations
One million voluntary wipes represents remarkable engagement for an optional system that erases accumulated progress.
The Reward Structure That Motivated Resets
Expedition Projects offered straightforward incentives. Players donated accumulated items toward collective goals, wiped their accounts upon completion, and received permanent skill points carrying into subsequent cycles. The skill point rewards persist across future resets, creating lasting value from temporary sacrifice.
Watkins revealed that 35-40% of participating players achieved maximum contribution requirements. That threshold demanded generating five million credits worth of stash value—a substantial target requiring significant playtime investment.
The completion percentage indicates serious commitment from participants. These weren’t casual resets from players with nothing to lose. Significant portions of the participating population invested heavily before pulling the trigger on their accumulated wealth.
The Hoarding Behavior Nobody Wanted
Expedition success came with unintended consequences that undermined core gameplay during the contribution period.
Players Stopped Playing Like It’s a Shooter
Once the community recognized the five million credit target, behavior shifted dramatically. Risk-taking disappeared. Players stopped deploying valuable equipment. Raids became exercises in preservation rather than combat engagement.
Watkins acknowledged the communication timeline contributed to this problem. Late awareness of specific requirements gave players insufficient adjustment time, creating sudden pressure to accumulate rather than gradually building toward goals.
The result transformed Arc Raiders from extraction shooter into inventory management simulator. Servers filled with players avoiding engagements, protecting credit values, treating ammunition as precious commodities rather than expendable resources.
The Fundamental Design Contradiction
Extraction shooters thrive on tension between risk and reward. Bringing valuable equipment creates advantages but risks permanent loss. That calculation drives moment-to-moment decision-making and generates memorable encounters.
Credit-based contribution requirements inverted this dynamic entirely. Every raid became about preservation rather than performance. The cool weapons players spent weeks unlocking stayed in stashes because deploying them risked the resources needed for Expedition completion.
Watkins directly acknowledged this “potential outcome of disincentivizing using your gear” requires revision. The current system accidentally punished exactly the gameplay it should encourage.
Embark’s Data-Driven Approach to Solutions
The development team now possesses extensive information about player behavior during the Expedition period.
Granular Tracking Enables Precise Analysis
Watkins mentioned visibility extending to “the individual pieces of rubber people donated.” This tracking granularity allows Embark to identify exactly how hoarding behavior manifested, which player segments participated most actively, and where the experience succeeded versus failed.
Detailed behavioral data enables targeted adjustments rather than wholesale system overhauls. Understanding precisely how players responded to incentives helps design better incentives for future cycles.
Balancing Accessibility and Challenge
The next Expedition window opens in approximately six weeks. Embark’s stated goal involves creating engagement pathways for broader player populations, not exclusively hardcore grinders with unlimited playtime.
This balance presents genuine design challenges. Rewards must motivate participation without creating anxiety-driven hoarding. Requirements need accessibility for casual players while still representing meaningful accomplishment. The system should encourage playing the actual game rather than gaming the system.
What Future Expeditions Should Prioritize
Skill-based contribution metrics could address hoarding problems directly. Rewarding combat performance, successful extractions, or objective completions ties progress to active gameplay rather than passive accumulation.
Time-gated contribution windows might prevent last-minute panic hoarding by spreading requirements across the entire Expedition period. Players couldn’t wait until final weeks to suddenly shift into preservation mode.
Gear-usage bonuses could directly counter the equipment hoarding tendency. Deploying rare items during Expeditions might multiply contribution values, making active use more valuable than stash preservation.
Whatever solutions emerge, the one million participant baseline demonstrates genuine community interest in reset mechanics done thoughtfully. Arc Raiders proved players will voluntarily sacrifice progress for meaningful rewards. Now Embark must ensure that sacrifice feels rewarding throughout the process, not just at the finish line.
Did you participate in the Arc Raiders Expedition wipe? Share your experience in the comments below.
Steam Down Christmas Eve 2025: The Holiday Outage Nobody Wanted
Publisher Accidentally Confirms New Switch 2 Cartridge Sizes (And Then Panics)
McDonald’s Pokemon Cards 2026: The Ultimate Guide to the 30th Anniversary Promotion
‘Clair Obscur’ Just Lost Its Game of the Year Award, And I Am So Sick Of This Exhausting AI Witch Hunt
Sony Faces Unpatchable PS5 Jailbreak Threat After PS5 BootROM Keys Leaked
