Nuclear Nightmare - Console (PS5, PS4, Xbox) Release Explained

The popularity of Nuclear Nightmare has blown up recently. So, players start asking about potential ports on the PS5, PS4, Xbox and Switch consoles.

Agnes Adamus

Source: Nuclear Nightmare, developer: BG Productions

Nuclear Nightmare is a co-op horror, which seems to be heavily inspired by legendary The Thing. So, you end up in the US base located in the Arctic and your mission is to retrieve classified materials. The problem, however, lies in the fact that the facility has been overrun by a mysterious virus that transforms living creatures into monsters, and you have to escape before nuclear bombs drop.

Nuclear Nightmare was released on October 21st, but it’s popularity has blown up a couple of days ago. Two days ago, the production attracted more than 10 000 concurrent players (via SteamDB), reaching its peak so far. This growth in interest has caused some people to start asking about potential ports on the PS5, PS4, Xbox and Switch consoles.

Nuclear Nightmare – Console (PS5, PS4, Xbox and Switch) Release Explained

Like many other games from independent developers, initially, Nuclear Nightmare is available only on PC (via Steam). The game wasn’t a success from the start. The last few days have brought an increase in interest among players. So, developers probably have just started thinking about the potential ports (unless they are still shocked by rise in popularity).

Owners of PlayStation 5, PS4, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S and Nintendo Switch have to wait for now. Probably, in the near future, developers will decide the fate of potential console ports. Unfortunately, for now, it's hard to say how big the chances are. It depends on how long-lasting the influx of players will be.

Like it?

0

Author: Agnes Adamus

Associated with gamepressure.com since 2017. She started with guides and now mainly creates for the newsroom, encyclopedia, and marketing. Self-proclaimed free-to-play games expert. Loves strategy games, simulators, RPGs, and horrors. She also has a weakness for online games. Spent an indecent number of hours in Dead by Daylight and Rainbow Six: Siege. Besides that, she likes horror movies (the worse, the better) and listen to music. Her greatest passion, however, is for trains. On paper, a medical physicist. In fact, a humanist who has loved games since childhood.