Extraction shooters are older than you’d think and they stand to only become more commonplace (Embark Studios/Bungie/Metro) GameCentral examines the current state of the extraction shooter genre and what sort of impact Arc Raiders’ success could have on it.
The games industry loves to chase trends.
That’s always been the case, but it’s never been more obvious than since so many of them started pumping out live service games, with Sony and Ubisoft in particular trying (and failing) to release a mega multiplayer hit.
Any time a new video game manages to prove even marginally successful, you can count on other publishers eventually releasing their own alternative, just as Fortnite helped spark a surplus of battle royale games.
As such, the recent success of Arc Raiders has made it, and extraction shooters in general, the hot new genre to copy, but whether Arc Raiders will become a trendsetter or a one hit wonder remains to be seen.
What is an extraction shooter? Since there aren’t that many of them, and they’ve only recently come into the spotlight, there’s no strict definition of what an extraction shooter is, but put simply it’s a game where you have to escape a map rather than shoot anything, or anyone, in particular.
Typically, the games are shooters (often first person) with PvPvE gameplay, which means player versus player versus environment.
Or to put it in actual English, you have to combat, or avoid, both human-controlled opponents and computer-controlled enemies.
There’s typically resources and/or loot involved too, which you can take back to your extraction point with you.
If you’re playing in a team, and depending on the game, this can sometimes be used to determine who won a match.
Although often merely escaping is the only achievement you need.
Escape From Tarkov is undeniably popular but Arc Raiders is arguably closer to a mainstream success (Battlestate Games) When did the extraction shooter genre start? Despite feeling like a new concept, extraction shooters are much older than you might think.
One of the most famous examples, Escape From Tarkov, has been around since early 2017 but it was by no means the first.
It is the one that helped to popularise the genre, though, resulting in similar military themed extraction shooters, like 2024’s Gray Zone Warfare and 2025’s Delta Force.
Curiously, there doesn’t seem to be a common consensus on what the first extraction shooter actually was.
There’s arguments in favour of Ubisoft’s The Division from 2016 (which has an extraction shooter style post-game in its Dark Zone mode), elements of 2012’s famous DayZ, and even 2008 zombie shooter Left 4 Dead.
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GameCentral has been delivering unique games news and reviews for over a decade None of these games explicitly advertise themselves as extraction shooters, but then this list of extraction games available on Steam includes many other titles that don’t either.
We wouldn’t call Helldivers 2 a dedicated extraction shooter, but it does involve reaching an extraction point once you clear a mission in order to reap any rewards, which is apparently enough for it to count.
Similarly, Dark & Darker is billed as a fantasy dungeon crawler, but despite the lack of guns, it too is counted as an extraction shooter since you form a squad with other players to gather loot, and you don’t get to keep it unless you successfully escape from the dungeon.
What are the best extraction shooters? Although there have been a lot of extraction shooters over the years very few examples have come from any of the big name publishers, with most being indie titles.
There was Ubisoft’s Rainbow Six Extraction from 2022, but that wasn’t much more than a professionally made mod and didn’t have much impact.
Instead, publishers have tended to include extraction modes in already existing games.
EA had something like that in Battlefield 2042, with its Hazard Zone mode, and its current Battlefield Redsec battle royale spin-off has extraction missions as part of its Gauntlet mode.
Activision, meanwhile, added its own extraction shooter mode, titled DMZ, to 2022’s Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2.
It was only ever labelled as a beta and effectively abandoned just a year later, but DMZ’s influence can be felt in Call Of Duty: Black Ops 7’s PvE Endgame mode (one of the few enjoyable things about the game).
Plus, insider TheGhostOfHope previously claimed DMZ will be brought back for this year’s instalment.
2019’s Borderlands 3 received a battle royale mode as DLC, where you need to use a loot extractor to keep any loot you obtain, while 2024’s Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 has a squad-based Operations mode that requires you to reach an escape ship upon completing missions.
How popular can extraction shooters get? It seems many publishers feel there’s merit to the extraction shooter genre, but not necessarily enough to warrant full games.
The only noteworthy exceptions are Arc Raiders (developer and publisher Embark Studios is a subsidiary of South Korean company Nexon), Arena Breakout (which comes from Chinese conglomerate Tencent), and Bungie’s upcoming Marathon reboot.
Sony and Bungie obviously settled on turning Marathon (an otherwise single-player series of shooters) into a multiplayer extraction shooter long before Arc Raiders dropped, but after years of only half-attempts, perhaps the tides have shifted and made publishers less hesitant to commit to....


