Skip to main content

'Quantum Break' will not see new patches or fixes on Windows 10

quantum break developers abandon support for windows 10 edition quantumbroke
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Remedy Entertainment’s time-bending third-person shooter Quantum Break is due for a Steam release soon, but fans who picked up the game at launch may be left out in the cold, as recent studio comments suggest that Remedy is dropping its support for previously issued PC editions.

Responding to user complaints regarding Quantum Break‘s lingering performance issues on PCs, Thomas Puha, Remedy’s head of communications, said the studio is “unlikely” to release new patches for the Windows Store edition released in April, indicating that development efforts have shifted toward the upcoming Steam launch.

Recommended Videos

Released for Windows 10 PCs and Microsoft’s Xbox One console in April, Quantum Break follows up on developer Remedy Entertainment’s work with the Alan Wake and Max Payne franchises. Players control a superpowered protagonist who can manipulate time in order to freeze or disable enemies, though gameplay otherwise sticks closely to established third-person shooter conventions.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

In an unusual move, Quantum Break was initially available for PCs exclusively through Microsoft’s Windows Store app, requiring players to upgrade to Windows 10 in order to play. The upcoming Steam release eases these restrictions, and will be playable on Windows 7 and Windows 8 operating systems.

The Steam version of Quantum Break further distances itself from the previously issued Windows Store edition in terms of support. While the game saw a handful of patches and fixes following its initial release, this week’s comments from Remedy indicate that players should switch over to the Steam edition if they want to see new features and improvements in the future.

Players who purchased the abandoned Windows 10 version of Quantum Break shouldn’t expect a free upgrade to the Steam edition, however, as Remedy’s Puha refused user requests for compensatory Steam keys, stating that “we don’t publish the game nor make business decisions on it.”

The Steam version of Quantum Break launches on September 14.

Danny Cowan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Danny’s passion for video games was ignited upon his first encounter with Nintendo’s Duck Hunt, and years later, he still…
Windows 11 might pull ahead of Windows 10 in one key way
Windows 11 and Windows 10 operating system logos are displayed on laptop screens.

Windows 11 has been around for nearly a year, but the debate on how it stands up against Windows 10 is still going strong. That's why custom computer builder Puget Systems revisited that very topic, with the results finding that Windows 11 might pull ahead of Windows 10 in one key area.

This one key area involves content creation, and Puget Systems detailed that in several tests, made gains over Windows 10 in the last year. Those gains are mainly due to monthly Windows 11 patches, and the launch of new CPUs. Yet Windows 10 also performed faster in some tests, too, where the hardware running the tests were the same.

Read more
Elden Ring’s new patch still stutters; here’s how to fix it
Armored character wielding sword in Elden Ring.

Elden Ring received a new patch today, but it's not the solution to PC performance issues fans had hoped for. Version 1.02.2 (1.2.2 on Steam, even though the announcement says otherwise) only has a few notes. FromSoftware fixed an issue with the graphics card not being used, a bug with a certain boss, and various smaller bugs.

But there's still no solution for stuttering.

Read more
Windows 11’s taskbar may get a handy feature from Windows 10
Laptop sitting on a desk showing Windows 11's built-in Microsoft Teams experience.

If you're a heavy multitasker in Windows 11, you might have noticed that your taskbar might be a little messy when you have too many apps open at once. Windows 10 had a handy overflow feature to help in that situation, and according to a noted Windows leaker on Twitter, it could soon make a comeback on Windows 11.

While Microsoft hasn't confirmed anything about this just yet, @thebookisclosed is the one who has the specifics of the feature. With it, you should be able to see and access all of your open apps in a new overflow bin in the Windows 11 taskbar.

Read more