Marvel Tokusatsu Fighting Souls faces the same regional restrictions that plagued Helldivers 2, with Steam's backend revealing 132 countries blocked from purchasing or playing the game. PlayStation's approach to PC ports continues to frustrate players worldwide.
The fighting game suffers from PSN region locking identical to the controversies surrounding Helldivers 2's launch. Players in restricted territories cannot access the title despite Steam's global reach, creating artificial barriers for audiences outside PlayStation's approved regions. This replicates the exact player friction that damaged Helldivers 2's initial reception on PC.
PlayStation discontinued mandatory PSN account linking for PC players following Helldivers 2 backlash, but regional restrictions persist regardless. The company justifies these limitations through licensing agreements and regional publishing rights, though the practice alienates massive swaths of the global player base.
Marvel Tokusatsu Fighting Souls represents PlayStation's continued investment in porting multiplayer titles to PC to inflate concurrent player numbers, yet the regional lockout undermines this strategy. Players in blocked countries face either VPN workarounds or complete exclusion from a PlayStation Studios title available on Valve's platform.
The 132-country restriction mirrors what Helldivers 2 experienced, suggesting PlayStation either refuses to learn from that controversy or lacks the flexibility to renegotiate licensing terms. Fighting games depend on healthy matchmaking populations, making region locks particularly damaging to the experience.
This pattern signals that while PlayStation removes account-linking friction, the company maintains aggressive territorial control over its PC releases. Until licensing agreements change, PC players outside approved regions will continue facing these artificial boundaries, regardless of how many regional restrictions PlayStation removes elsewhere.
