Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

Call of Duty has been regarded as the best first-person shooter franchise on the market for the past twenty years. It has gone from strength to strength, with the series spanning almost forty major releases. However, since the franchise arguably peaked between 2009 and 2013, player counts have fallen or are inconsistent, there are a lot of dissents in the community, and developers keep slipping up. So, we’re asking an all-important question: ‘Is Call of Duty dying?’

It’s a top-tier esports title – but the ecosystem is restricted. There’s a popular battle royale offering in the mix – but it has been plagued with cheaters and stability issues since it was released back in 2020. Every year, a new multiplayer title is released in the series – but it’s almost always met with disappointment by fans who just aren’t pleased with it. There are so many pitfalls to address, it makes the question, ‘Is Call of Duty dying,’ all that much harder to fully overcome.

Is there enough work being done to save the ecosystem? If COD is dying, is there anything that Activision can do to save it? Let’s find out.

As Time Goes On

Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

It can be argued that Call of Duty’s heyday spanned from 2009 to around 2013, reaching from Modern Warfare 2 to Ghosts. This was, according to opinions and statistics, the most popular and exciting period for Call of Duty, and the franchise saw massive growth. While the esports side of Call of Duty has continued to grow as time has gone on, the multiplayer experience and overall feel of Call of Duty were much more enjoyable a decade ago.

From this period, some of the most popular Call of Duty titles of all time emerged:

  • Call of Duty: Black Ops (2010, 31m sold)
  • Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 (2011, 31m sold)
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops II (2012, 30m sold)
  • Call of Duty: Ghosts (2013, 29m sold)
  • Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (2009, 26m sold)

These old titles still hold up today. For instance, in March of 2025, a special MW3 esports tournament was held, and according to escharts.com, it pulled in a peak viewership of 439,000 users. This puts it in second place overall for the record of the most concurrent viewers for a Call of Duty tournament in esports industry history. So, is Call of Duty dying? If we compare what exists today to that ‘heyday’, it could be.

While 2019’s Modern Warfare was something of a boon for the franchise, revitalising both the multiplayer scene and the esports community, it died off fast. There’s no doubt that Warzone was a monumental introduction in 2020, but the poor performances of both Cold War and Vanguard sapped the franchise’s energy. That’s one of the things that made people declare that Call of Duty is dead.

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Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

Modern Warfare Mixes Things Up

But, with all that negative news aside, we should touch upon a ‘mixed topic’ – Modern Warfare. In October 2025, Activision released Modern Warfare 2, serving as a direct expansion to 2019’s Modern Warfare. It turned out to be the fastest-selling Call of Duty title in history, shifting more than 8 million copies in a week and notching up $1 billion in sales in just a few days.

It was a monumental title that took the world by storm, but it was still met with a lot of disappointment from fans, particularly because it was missing key deliverables at launch. For instance, Modern Warfare 2 was missing any hardcore playlists when the game was released, which was considered a bizarre move by a large portion of the community.

Then, a year later, Sledgehammer Games developed and released Modern Warfare 3. That was seen as being a ‘$70 DLC’, as despite being marketed as a full game, it felt like little more than an expansion to 2025’s Modern Warfare 2. It still sold remarkably well, but it became the lowest-rated Call of Duty game in history, further adding to Activision’s despair around its flagship game.

Activision’s Active Vision

For years, Activision (and Call of Duty’s various developers) have been wrestling with the community at large, trying desperately to keep the players happy. In the wider debate as to whether or not Call of Duty is dying, we can simply look to the numbers that echo the opinions of the players themselves. In Q1 of 2025, it was revealed that Activision had witnessed a grand slump through 2021, losing millions of active monthly users on titles like Call of Duty: Warzone.

Within just one year, Call of Duty’s platform had bled out, losing more than 60 million players.

It’s thought that the commercial failure that was Vanguard and the extremely underwhelming performance of Warzone led to this drop in players. When Caldera was introduced to Warzone, it brought with it a slew of issues, bugs, and exploits, and players simply weren’t happy. Many abandoned the battle royale platform and moved to other titles, like Apex Legends, and that included some of the best Call of Duty players the world has come to know.

Here are some of the opinions of fans, taken from recent Reddit posts:

Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

One user explains that only top-tier streamers make a difference in the Call of Duty community, talking negatively about ‘aesthetic packs’.

Activision’s decisions to focus on battle pass content and aesthetic bundles are always met with a mixed reception. For many, they’re the plague of the community, but for others, the bright, inventive skins and bundles are a welcome introduction.

Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

Vanguard proved to be a sour point for many long-term fans of the franchise.

For many fans, Call of Duty Vanguard marked a point to step back from the franchise.

Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

For some, it’s an argument of quantity over quality.

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By now, Call of Duty has established such a strong reputation that it remains at the top of the charts regardless of how good the actual game is.

Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

One Reddit user argued that Call of Duty is far from dying, based on sheer sales figures alone.

Is Call of Duty dying? Not according to CongenitalSlurpees, but it’s only thanks to its sales figures that it isn’t.

Is It Time To Call It Quits?

According to a study by GamesIndustry, Call of Duty may simply be suffering from the universal exhaustion of the franchise.

On streaming platforms like Twitch, Call of Duty has seen a massive decline in viewership. While the esports tournaments bring in the big numbers, viewer counts on titles like Warzone, Modern Warfare 2, and even the newer Modern Warfare 3 have slumped. As fewer streamers are putting out content and fewer viewers are watching that content, Call of Duty in general has less exposure, while competing titles grow consistently over time.

Even Modern Warfare 3, the most recent title, experienced a huge drop in viewership over a short period. It peaked at 444,866 viewers the day the game was released, but by the time of writing this article in December 2025, the average viewer count over the last seven days sat at just 17,345 users, which is a massive dip.

According to TwitchTracker.com, Warzone’s performance on Twitch has been on a steady decline since midway through 2021. There have been a few peaks around major events, but for the most part, it’s winding down. In the middle of 2025, the game dipped to its lowest numbers ever on the streaming platform.

Is Call of Duty Dying? | The Truth About Call of Duty in 2025

For a while now, the Call of Duty formula has remained unchanged. We’ve seen little innovation outside of new game modes and features, and that’s starting to hurt the series. People are generally getting tired of the rinse-and-repeat format that the series follows year in, year out. For the most part, those left hanging on are the ones insisting that ‘this year will be the one’ every time they buy the annual iteration of COD.

If we’re asking, ‘is Call of Duty dying’, we can certainly see evidence that it might be. It still sells well and succeeds commercially, but as we’ve stressed, that’s because it’s a household name. It is a powerful brand, but that doesn’t stop complaints about the game from spreading like wildfire with each new release.

There were hopes that Modern Warfare 3 would do a better job of revitalising the series, leaning on nostalgia to draw players back into the fight. However, it became the lowest-rated COD game ever, and even the COD esports scene suffered, impacting the depth of the Call of Duty betting opportunities in the industry.

Is Call of Duty dying? There are signs that it might be.

AESA
AESA

The AESA is a member of the International Esports Federation (IeSF) as a national member representing Australia. Currently the IeSF comprises of over 88 nations and is signatory to the World Anti-Doping Agency and actively working towards SportAccord membership.