By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
GamexploreGamexplore
  • Home
  • News
  • PC Game
  • Mobile
  • VR News
  • Hardware
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • Upcoming
Reading: Sin Reloaded is coming out this year because Nightdive refused to break a promise
Share
Notification
GamexploreGamexplore
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • PC Game
  • Mobile
  • VR News
  • Hardware
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • Upcoming
Follow US
© 2025 All rights reserved | Powered by Gamexplore
Gamexplore > My Bookmarks > PC Game > Sin Reloaded is coming out this year because Nightdive refused to break a promise
PC Game

Sin Reloaded is coming out this year because Nightdive refused to break a promise

March 16, 2026 8 Min Read
Share
8 Min Read
Sin Reloaded is coming out this year because Nightdive refused to break a promise
SHARE

In 2020, Nightdive Studios made a promise: It was going to remaster Sin, a 1998 shooter by Ritual Entertainment. Things didn’t go according to plan. In 2023, the studio put out a transparent message to its community noting that the project was delayed due to other projects taking priority. It asserted that the game was not dead, but three years of radio silence had fans of the classic game losing hope.

Well, Nightdive wasn’t lying: Sin Reloaded is indeed alive, and coming to consoles and Windows PC this year. I can confirm its pulse because I went hands-on with it this week at the Game Developers Conference and spoke to the team at Nightdive about why it took so long to release it. Some big gigs got in the way, but for Nightdive, a promise is a promise.

Sin Reloaded is a faithful recreation of 1998’s Sin, a cult classic boomer shooter that’s very much of its time. It stars a wise-cracking, macho hero in the vein of Duke Nukem. In the demo, I blasted my way through a few classic levels, shooting through a bank and gunning down bad guys from a helicopter’s chain gun. As is the case with so many Nightdive remasters, it plays pretty much exactly like you remember it, but with 4K textures, reworked control options, map tweaks, and tons of archival material. The neatest trick is that you can press a button to toggle between the art from Sin Gold (Nightdive’s 2020 PC port of the original game) and a smoother remaster, complete with more detailed character portraits during dialogue.

See also  Assassin’s Creed Codename Hexe Narrative Director Says New Lead Writer is Working on “Other Content”

Sin is a bit of a personal passion project for Nightdive. Larry Kuperman, VP of business development at the studio, told me that he loves the game because it brings him back to “one of the most fun periods” of games. He sees it as a pivotal part of the boomer shooter genre, which still has a strong following today, so Sin deserved just as much of a comeback as more popular genre games like Doom. Kuperman isn’t the only one who feels so strongly about those games.

“Whenever we do a remaster, we always find out that there’s an audience of people who have an immediate personal reaction,” Kuperman told gamexplore. “‘I played this game with my father, he passed away years ago’ or something along those lines. There’s something that goes beyond the game itself. That’s one of the joys of working at Nightdive and doing what we do.”


Blade shoots two pistols in Sin Reloaded.
Image: Nightdive Studios, Ritual Entertainment/Atari

Having a dedicated audience for an old game is great for a studio that specializes in remasters, but there’s a flipside to that coin. If you tell a particularly passionate fanbase that you’re going to do something, they’re going to hold you to your word. Producer Grover Wimberly learned that the hard way after Nightdive announced the project’s delay in 2023.

“I read social media comments every Friday, for better or for worse. Some weeks are better than others!” Wimberly said. “No matter what post, no matter what game it’s about, it’s like ‘Oh that’s nice. When’s Sin Reloaded coming? You said you were going to come back to it. Is this game cancelled?’”

See also  The fact that Lune from Clair Obscur is barefoot the whole time is not gross, it’s fun

We said we were going to do it, and now we’ve done it.

Nightdive tried to be transparent over the last three years, repeatedly telling players that the game was still coming, but fans were understandably skeptical. Six years is a long time to wait for a remaster. But there was never a point where Sin Reloaded was in danger of not coming out. It’s just that Nightdive was a victim of its own success, getting the keys to bigger and bigger projects as it found success as a go-to remaster studio.

“There were two games that we had that we felt were obligations,” Kuperman said. “One was System Shock 2. The remaster on that had to come because that was something we had promised that to people who had early backed on the System Shock remake. Sin was the other one. Because we owned the rights to Sin, we always put it on the backburner when we had other time-critical projects. I don’t feel the need to defend why we did Doom or Quake! But we said we were going to do it, and now we’ve done it.”

Nightdive did indeed have a lot of big name games on its plate over the past few years. Doom + Doom 2, Heretic + Hexen, and Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster were just a few of the games it has churned out recently. At some point, it was just a waiting game with Sin. Wimberly said that once the team wrapped up Killing Time, The Thing Remastered, and a batch of Turok next-gen updates, the runway was finally clear.


A boss with a buzz saw weapon stands tall in Sin Reloaded.
Image: Nightdive Studios, Ritual Entertainment/Atari

Giving Sin the time it deserved was crucial to Nightdive. As a studio that works exclusively with beloved games, it knows that you can’t crap out a low-effort port and call it a day. Pulling it off right means listening to the community and knowing what kinds of changes it is and isn’t comfortable with. Wimberly noted that speedrunners, for instance, want to make sure that all their old tricks work in a new game. Nightdive has a formula for getting that right.

See also  Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 3 Will Have the Same Development Cycle as Space Marine 2

“In many cases when we go to remaster a title, there’s an existing community that has kept it alive,” Kuperman said. “The question comes up: How can you satisfy that community? How do you know what they want? And the answer that we’ve come up with a couple of times is, we hire them!”

The team working on Sin Reloaded includes Matthew Tropiano, a map designer who also worked on Doom + Doom 2 and the Vestiges of Grandeur content in the Hexen remaster. Tropiano said that he started working with the Doom engine when he was 10 years old. That’s the kind of person Nightdive looks for when it wants to do right by a game like Sin.

That community-driven approach seems to work for Nightdive. It has worked hard to build trust with a very protective audience over the years. Finally delivering on its promise to finish Sin Reloaded might just keep that good will intact for a while longer.


Sin Reloaded will be released in 2026 for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch, Windows PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X.

You Might Also Like

Bright Memory: Infinite Developer Reveals New Third-Person Action Shooter With Gorgeous Images

The Outer Worlds 2 Will Also Release for PC via Battle.net

Elden Ring Nightreign Guide – Best Relics And Where To Find Them

Why the Exact Same Things Make Starfield Brilliant to Some and Boring to Others

Blue Prince, an almost perfect puzzle game, still tragically lacks a colorblind mode

TAGGED:Latest GamePC Game
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Onimusha Way of the Sword Onimusha: Way of the Sword Team is “Working on the Final Stages of Development,” Says Director
Next Article starfield Starfield Developer Has “More to Share” This Week, Todd Howard “Appreciates the Passionate Feedback”
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Pete-Hines
Former Bethesda Executive Says Studio Isn’t Part of Anything “Authentic”, “Genuine” Anymore
News April 13, 2026
Fable_03
Fable Reaffirmed for Release This Fall Despite Rumors of An Internal Delay
PC Game April 13, 2026
TaVRn's Takedown - Naheulbeuk Review: Punching Orcs Has Never Felt So Good
TaVRn's Takedown – Naheulbeuk Review: Punching Orcs Has Never Felt So Good
VR News April 13, 2026
Amazon Luna
Amazon Luna Will No Longer Support Third-Party Stores or Subscriptions on June 10th
Upcoming April 13, 2026
The 3 best racing games to play before Forza Horizon 6
The 3 best racing games to play before Forza Horizon 6
PC Game April 13, 2026
Metro Exodus
Metro 2039 is the Next Game in the Series – Rumor
News April 13, 2026
Cyberpunk 2077 Isn’t Done Yet, and PS5 Pro Proves It
Cyberpunk 2077 Isn’t Done Yet, and PS5 Pro Proves It
PC Game April 13, 2026
gamexplore gamexplore
gamexplore gamexplore

Welcome to Gamexplore, your go-to destination for everything gaming. We are dedicated to delivering the latest updates, in-depth insights, and expert analysis from the ever-evolving gaming industry.

Editor Choice

Mafia: The Old Country – New Video Featuring Mafia Historian Discusses Accuracy to Real History
‘Star Trek: Infection’ is Bringing a Slice of VR Body Horror to Quest 3 This Year
Wuchang: Fallen Feathers Tops 130,000 Peak Concurrent Steam Players
Trails in the Sky 1st Chapter Officially Launches on September 19th

Trending News

Ninja Gaiden 4: The Two Masters DLC Launches in Early 2026, Includes New Story and Post-Game Content
DOOM: The Dark Ages’ Levels are id Software’s “Largest Spaces” Ever, But Still “Nice and Contained”
Don’t Lose Aggro is a single-player roguelike where you must tank for your party of heroes
Highguard is Permanently Shutting Down on March 12th
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Reading: Sin Reloaded is coming out this year because Nightdive refused to break a promise
Share
© 2025 All rights reserved | Powered by Gamexplore
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?