Destiny 2 is really ending, huh. Bungie’s recently announced Monument of Triumph update, a caution-to-the-wind blowout marking the end of active development on one of the most influential games of the past decade, is out today, June 9. Destiny 2 players have answered the call, turning out in numbers not seen since the beloved Final Shape expansion.
SteamDB shows that Destiny 2’s concurrent Steam player count has jumped to 165,856 at the time of writing (up 9,000 from when I started writing this article) following characteristic queue issues. This makes the Monument of Triumph the most active Destiny 2 update since summer 2024, which nearly matched the all-time player peak of 316,750.
Bear in mind, Destiny 2 was in such dire shape that, for nearly all of 2026, it’s averaged well under 20,000 concurrent players on Steam. On May 4, it was sitting at roughly 12,851. The big sendoff – packed with balance changes, updated loot, new abilities, reprised activities, and a festive farewell – has clearly resonated.
This is, of course, bittersweet. To get Destiny 2 players to actually come back, all Bungie had to do was kill the game. That’s a little harsh, but it’s just plain true. The Monument of Triumph is packed with excellent changes and outright corrections that many players wanted well over a year ago, but it’s demonstrably too late.
The Destiny 2 servers will stay on for the foreseeable future – heck, even Destiny 1 is still playable – but there are no more updates coming barring minor technical hotfixes. The aspirational element, the excitement and anticipation of summiting the next mountain, is gone. This is it.
In the background, Marathon, now Bungie’s only active game, is once again in a slow decline following the start of Season 2, which peaked at under half of the game’s launch boom (itself already smaller than the crowd that the free beta drew). Some fun new content, improved progression, and a free-to-play week have boosted the game, but increasingly it feels like Marathon just doesn’t have the legs of an evergreen hit. It remains unmatched as a game for sickos, though.
Meanwhile, mourning Destiny 2 players are desperately asking Bungie and owner Sony to greenlight development of Destiny 3, which, to be completely and utterly clear, is not in the works. Bungie has not announced any new projects. All it has said is that it’s begun incubating potential ideas. A related Destiny 3 petition has over 373,000 signees, which is a solid turnout for this kind of movement, but given Bungie’s position, we may as well ask the stars in the sky.
Destiny 2 bug that destroys bosses in “a few well-placed shots” disabled by Bungie ahead of the MMO’s last update: “We want to ensure your experiences aren’t trivialized.”
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