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  "path": "/lego-2k-drive-delisting",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-18T09:35:10.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.eurogamer.net",
  "tags": [
    "Open World",
    "Third person",
    "Xbox One",
    "Lego 2K Drive",
    "PS5",
    "Racing",
    "Action Adventure",
    "PC",
    "Visual Concepts",
    "Family-friendly",
    "Xbox Series X/S",
    "Multiplayer Competitive",
    "Single Player",
    "2K Games",
    "Multiplayer Cooperative",
    "Arcade",
    "Nintendo Switch",
    "PS4",
    "Stop Killing Games",
    "recently made it to the European Parliament",
    "The Crew 2 is the most recent win",
    "Read more"
  ],
  "textContent": "The Stop Killing Games initiative, which is fighting against the full termination of games, recently made it to the European Parliament and has pushed publishers like Ubisoft to make their games accessible when the servers are shut off - The Crew 2 is the most recent win. Now, 2K games is delisting casual racing game Lego 2K Drive this week, but it'll remain playable online for another year and work offline once support ends.\n\nRead more",
  "title": "As the Stop Killing Games initiative advances, blocky racing game Lego 2K Drive is being delisted tomorrow"
}