PlayStation just leveled up its studio roster—again. This time, it’s bringing on teamLFG, a developer that’s not only rallying industry veterans but doing so with a mission we can all get behind: making online gaming feel like coming home to your crew.
Welcome teamLFG to the PlayStation Studios family
byu/Turbostrider27 inGames
Announced earlier today, teamLFG is officially joining the PlayStation Studios family. This isn’t just another acquisition—it’s a rallying cry. TeamLFG’s devs are a mix of industry powerhouses and fresh creative minds. We’re talking talent from Destiny, Halo, League of Legends, Roblox, and Rec Room. The studio itself is based in Bellevue, Washington, but the team operates across the U.S. and Canada—fully remote-friendly and future-focused.
While the group got its start within Bungie, teamLFG is now branching out into its own vision, and it’s got one heck of a pitch: build games where players don’t just queue for matches—they log in to find friends already hanging out. If that’s not a vibe shift from the chaos of modern multiplayer, we don’t know what is.
LFG stands for “Looking For Group,” but this crew’s mission goes way beyond filling a lobby. According to their announcement, they’re aiming to create “immersive multiplayer action games” that players can learn, master, and enjoy for hours on end—not just grind through until the next seasonal battle pass drops.
And here’s the kicker—they’re committed to building these games with the community. They’re bringing players into the fold early via playtests and Early Access, but they’re also pledging to actually listen. No marketing fluff. Just the kind of dev transparency we all wish more studios practiced.
In their own words? “That’s da good stuff.” And you know what? They’re right.
TeamLFG wants to take the social part of online gaming seriously—less toxic lobbies, more real camaraderie. If they can really deliver a space where people are excited to log in, hang out, and play together without the pressure cooker of always sweating for top rank, they might be onto something big.
It’s a bold move in a world full of competitive grind-fests, but PlayStation seems confident in their vision. And frankly? So are we.
Because a multiplayer game that’s fun and friendly? Yeah—sign us up.
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