Call of Duty has long been the king of annualized FPS games. But in 2026, the series is facing a storm of criticism, disappointment, and uncertainty. The latest mainline entry, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 (released November 2025), failed to meet expectations. Meanwhile, Call of Duty: Warzone Mobile, launched in March 2024, has been officially marked for shutdown. With no official announcement yet for the 2026 title, the community is growing increasingly worried.
Let's break down what happened and what comes next.
Warzone Mobile: From Launch to Shutdown
Call of Duty: Warzone Mobile was supposed to bring the full battle royale experience to mobile, featuring 120-player matches on Verdansk, cross-progression, and the Gulag mechanic.
But after release, players reported poor optimization, battery drain, and unstable servers. In mid-2025, Activision quietly removed it from app stores. Official shutdown date: April 17, 2026, no refunds for unused COD Points.
Black Ops 7: A New Low for the Series
Released in November 2025, Black Ops 7 reportedly faced significant backlash shortly after launch. According to community feedback and various reports, the game received poor reviews on Steam and a very low Metacritic user score, potentially the lowest in series history, with some sources suggesting sales may have underperformed compared to previous entries. There have also been claims that Activision used generative AI for certain in-game art assets, with some players even alleging they received Steam refunds after arguing that the use of AI was not disclosed.
The solo campaign has been another point of criticism, with reports indicating it lacks AI teammates and traditional checkpoints, leading some outlets like IGN to suggest it could mark "the end of solo campaigns in Call of Duty." Additionally, certain players have voiced frustration over the multiplayer progression system, which they describe as overly grindy, allegedly locking basic weapon performance behind dozens of hours of gameplay, though opinions on these matters vary across the community.
Annual Fatigue: Running Out of Ideas?
The community's biggest concern is a pattern. It's not just one bad game.
Players are tired of many things. They don't like paying $70 for what feels like annual DLC. They see little real innovation each year. The matchmaking system feels too aggressive to many. And the install size is now over 500GB.
So some players are asking a simple question: Should Call of Duty stop coming out every year?
What's Next? The 2026 Call of Duty
No official reveal yet, but one major detail is confirmed:
That means true next-gen only (PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC) – the first time in 13 years the series drops old-gen support. Rumors suggest Modern Warfare 4, but it will not launch on Xbox Game Pass day one.
Will that be enough to win back frustrated fans? Many are skeptical.
Key Events Summary
| Event | Date / Status |
|---|---|
| Warzone Mobile launch | March 2024 |
| Warzone Mobile shutdown | April 17, 2026 |
| Black Ops 7 release | November 2025 |
| 2026 COD announced | Not yet |
| 2026 COD old-gen support | ❌ No PS4/Xbox One |
Call of Duty is at a crossroads. Warzone Mobile's shutdown shows mobile failure is possible even for legends. Black Ops 7 proves annual releases without innovation backfire. The 2026 title has a lot of trust to rebuild.

