Market intelligence

Oxide: Survival Island Online v1.12.944 Blocks Friends From Playing Together, Sparking June 2026 Backlash

Oxide: Survival Island Online's June 2026 update, version 1.12.944, removed the server region selection feature, preventing international friends from playing together. The change triggered significant user backlash, causing the app's average rating to drop by 0.77 stars.

3 min read
The update removed the ability to select regions, preventing players from playing with friends across different countries.
Oxide: Survival Island Online
On this page
  1. The Update
  2. Region Lock Confirmed
  3. Rating Drop
  4. Stability and Cheating
  5. Strategic Misstep
  6. Verdict

Key takeaways

  1. 01Version 1.12.944 removed the ability for players to manually select their game server region.
  2. 02The change prevents players in different countries from joining the same game, fracturing the international player base.
  3. 03Following the update, the app's average rating fell from 3.43 to 2.66 stars.
  4. 04The developer, HYPERHUG LTD, confirmed the change by publishing a support article titled "I can't change my region. What should I do?".
  5. 05User reviews also cite increased lag, crashes, and a persistent issue with hackers in the game.
  6. 06The app maintains a large audience, with over 241,000 downloads in the last 30 days on iOS in the US.

The UpdateLead

HYPERHUG LTD's survival game, Oxide: Survival Island Online, shipped version 1.12.944 on June 12, 2026, removing the ability for players to select their server region. This change has effectively blocked friends in different countries from playing together, triggering a sharp negative reaction from its community.

Region Lock ConfirmedRelease Summary

The core change in version 1.12.944 is the removal of the manual region selection menu. While the publisher did not issue detailed release notes, its own support website now features an article titled, "I can't change my region. What should I do?" This article serves as an official acknowledgment that the game now automatically assigns players to a server based on geography.

This change fundamentally alters a key social component of the game, as players who previously played with an international circle of friends can no longer connect with them. The motivation for the change has not been officially stated but is likely an attempt to improve server latency or reduce operational costs.

Rating DropUser Reception

The community's reaction to the update was immediate and severe. The app's average rating1]e Play — a primary ranking signal and one of the biggest conversion drivers on your product page. on the App Store dropped from 3.43 stars to 2.66 stars in the days after the release. The primary complaint, voiced across dozens of 1-star reviews, is the inability to play with friends. As one reviewer on version 1.12.944 wrote, "RETURN THE REGIONS SO THAT EVERYONE CAN PLAY WITH FRIENDS FROM DIFFERENT COUNTRIES!!!!!"

Another user stated simply, "RETURN THE REGIONS TO BE ABLE TO PLAY WITH FRIENDS." This sentiment highlights that for a significant portion of the user base, which has over 241,000 monthly downloads in the US, cross-region play was a critical feature.

Stability and CheatingBreaking Changes

Beyond the region lock, users report that version 1.12.944 has introduced new stability problems. One 1-star review claims, "every time they update the damn game it gets worse and more unplayable." This follows a pattern for the developer, which acknowledged "minor game stuttering" after a previous update in May 2026.

Complaints about in-game hackers have also intensified. The publisher appears aware of this issue, as its careers page lists an open role for a "Senior Unity Developer (Anti Cheat)". This suggests that while the company is working on the problem, the current user experience is negatively affected.

Strategic MisstepRoot Cause

The removal of region selection, while damaging to the community, was likely intended as a technical improvement. Forcing players onto local servers is a standard industry practice to reduce lag and provide a smoother gameplay experience. It can also simplify server maintenance and potentially lower infrastructure costs for the publisher.

However, HYPERHUG LTD appears to have underestimated the social impact of this decision. The backlash suggests the developer did not anticipate how many players valued the ability to connect with friends globally over the potential for lower latency. The strategic goal was overshadowed by the immediate negative effect on the user experience.

VerdictExpert Verdict

The backlash against Oxide version 1.12.944 shows a critical disconnect between the publisher's technical priorities and the community's social expectations. While optimizing for performance is logical, doing so by removing a core social feature without warning or an alternative solution has proven costly to user sentiment.

HYPERHUG LTD now faces pressure to either revert the change or implement a new system, such as a friend-invite mechanism that bypasses region locks. Without a clear response, the sustained negative ratings may harm the game's visibility and new player acquisition in a competitive market.

Citations

  1. [1]

    The release of version 1.12.944 directly correlates with a 0.77-star drop in the app's average rating, from 3.43 to 2.66 stars.

    "Oxide: Survival Island Online's average rating dropped from 3.43 stars (70 reviews) to 2.66 stars (50 reviews) after the v1.12.944 update."
  2. [2]

    The primary cause of the user backlash is the removal of the ability to select server regions, which has been confirmed by an article on the game's official support website.

    "The most significant piece of evidence is the appearance of the "I can't change my region. What should I do?" article on the official developer support site, support.playoxide.com."

Sources

4 references

Maxime Doussin, CTO at MWM

Maxime Doussin

CTO

Maxime Doussin is the CTO of MWM, where he leads engineering, data infrastructure, and the mobile-app market-intelligence platform. He writes MWM's weekly app trend analysis, drawing on proprietary ranking data covering millions of iOS and Android apps across 150+ countries.

This article is an independent editorial analysis. App names, trademarks, and brands mentioned are the property of their respective owners. Market data and rankings referenced are based on MWM's proprietary estimates.

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