Amazon's Lord of the Rings MMO Is Officially Canceled After Two Years of Development
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Amazon has officially confirmed the cancellation of its Lord of the Rings MMO, ending seven months of speculation that followed the company's October 2025 layoffs which eliminated approximately 14,000 employees and gutted a significant portion of Amazon Game Studios. The confirmation came through a statement from Amazon's Head of Games Jeff Grattis to Eurogamer, who reached out as part of a broader investigation into Amazon's canceled AI-led game Project Trident: "Our creative team continues to explore a compelling new game experience that does justice to Tolkien's world; we are working closely with Middle-earth and remain excited about the IP." The language implicitly confirms the original MMO is dead while leaving the door open for a different project in the same franchise. The brief development history that Eurogamer's sources shed light on makes the cancellation less surprising in retrospect — Amazon announced the game in May 2023 before securing a dedicated development team, with only one or two people working on it as a side project for years. Just before the October 2025 layoffs, over 1,000 developers were allegedly transferred from New World: Aeternum to the Lord of the Rings project, after which the layoffs effectively eliminated the team before meaningful work had been completed.
The collapse of the project represents the latest chapter in Amazon Game Studios' difficult history with large-scale game development, following the shutdown of New World: Aeternum and the scaling back of its MMO and AAA ambitions signaled in a leaked internal memo from Vice President of Games Steve Bloom around the time of the layoffs. The only MMO developers reportedly remaining at the studio are those managing the wind-down of existing released titles including New World, Throne and Liberty, and Lost Ark. What comes next for Amazon's Middle-earth ambitions is unclear, though Insider Gaming reported in March that Crystal Dynamics — currently working with Amazon on both Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis and Tomb Raider: Catalyst — could be developing a new Lord of the Rings game under the vague "compelling new game experience" framing in Grattis's statement. The original Lord of the Rings Online, developed by Daybreak, continues to run with a dedicated player base 19 years after its launch — a reminder that a well-executed Middle-earth MMO can sustain a community for decades, making the failure to even reach production on Amazon's version a particularly frustrating missed opportunity for fans of the franchise.Sonnet 4.6