PlayStation has delisted Destruction Allstars without warning, taken the game’s multiplayer services offline and removed Destruction Points from sale on the PlayStation Store. Returning players can still access Arcade mode, but the game’s online side has been cut off.
The move lands years after Destruction Allstars first arrived on PlayStation 5 on February 2, 2021, after a delayed launch that forced preorders to be refunded when it slipped from its original slot as a PS5 launch title. Developed by Lucid Games and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment, the vehicular combat game was also given away on PlayStation Plus, then saw its non-subscriber price fall from $70 to $20 within a month.
That steep discount was an early sign of how hard the game struggled to build an audience. Sony had already left it in maintenance mode before the current shutdown, and the official social feed went quiet after its last Twitter post in 2022. The latest changes now make clear the publisher is winding down what remains of the title’s live-service support rather than trying to revive it.
There is still one small window left for players who already hold Destruction Points. They can be redeemed until 25th November 2026, after which even that part of the game’s economy disappears. For a PlayStation 5 exclusive that was once meant to help define the console’s launch, the ending is blunt: the online experiment is over, and only the offline remnants are left behind.

