If you’ve been holding out hope thatMindsEyemight become the nextCyberpunk 2077and pull off a miraculous comeback, it might be time to throw in the towel. Those of you still playing are starting to get pretty lonely, as on multiple occasions over the course of the past week, there have been fewer than ten of you playing MindsEye at any given time onSteam.

According to SteamDB, there are ten of you playing MindsEye on Steam right now. If you’re one of those ten people, let us know in the comments below. Although I guess if you’re playing MindsEye right now, you’re not reading this. You know what, if you have played MindsEye on Steam at all in the last week, make yourselves known.

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MindsEye’s concurrent player count keeps dropping below ten

The odds that the few people still playing MindsEye onPCare also reading this article are low, though, as shockingly, ten concurrent players isn’t the Build A Rocket Boy game’s rock bottom. On at least five occasions over the last seven days, there have been fewer than ten people playing MindsEye on Steam at any given time. The lowest its player count has dropped is eight.

There are arguments to be made against these figures being as bad as they seem. MindsEye is available on multiple platforms, so those numbers aren’t as bad as they seem. Okay, I hear you. Let’s triple the number to account forPS5andXbox Series X|Splayers we can’t track. That’s still fewer than 30. Hell, let’s triple those numbers, just for fun. That’s still fewer than 100 concurrent players for a triple-A game that’s less than two months old.

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You might also point to MindsEye being a single-player game, so of course, its player count is going to drop once people are done playing through its campaign. By that logic, games likeDragon Age: The VeilguardandSonic Frontiers' player counts should have dropped to single digits a long time ago. Hundreds of people continue to play the latestDragon Agegame despite its issues, and there are 94 people playing Sonic Frontiers right now, even though it’s almost three years old.

There may have been hope at Build A Rocket Boy that cutting the price of MindsEye might have helped it, but that doesn’t seem to have made a difference.You can get it for $40 right now rather than its $60 MSRP, but even for a reduced price, most people can’t see past the game’s issues.

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