THE HOOK GOES DEEP
Steam reviews are telling a story that Reddit can't capture this cycle: Marathon's retention curve is brutal, but when it hits, it hits *hard*. Three separate reviewers with 300+ hours are calling the game "addicting" in ways that sound less like praise and more like a medical diagnosis.
"I didnt like this game at first but then it grew on me now I can't get enough," writes one 495-hour player. Another with 306 hours felt compelled to leave their "first time every leaving a review for a game" because Marathon "deserves more love than it receives." The third admits to grinding gear all season, getting destroyed in Cryo seven runs straight, then rating it "10/10 would do it again."
That's not normal retention behavior. That's extraction shooter addiction in its purest form.
THE TARKOV REPLACEMENT THESIS
The 475-hour reviewer nailed what's happening here: "Easily one of the best shooters of the year, if not the best extraction shooter in a long while since Hunt Showdowns debut." Marathon isn't competing with Destiny or Apex anymore. It's positioning itself as the accessible Tarkov alternative.
The 121-hour ex-Destiny player put it perfectly: "Tarkov was too much and Arcs always felt a bit too safe. Marathon is square in" between them. Bungie's gunplay foundation plus extraction stakes without the hardcore survival mechanics is hitting a sweet spot nobody else owns.
But here's the problem: that positioning only works if you survive the brutal onboarding phase.
THE 39-HOUR WALL
The negative reviews cluster around low playtime for a reason. "Its okay, feels like apex legends. Slow updates. No duos on launch," writes someone with 39 hours. The 15-hour reviewer dismisses it entirely: "Despite having all the resources that should've gone into Destiny 3, Marathon failed to be a compelling game."
These aren't review bombs or Destiny protest votes. These are players who bounced off the learning curve before Marathon's hooks could set. The game clearly has a retention cliff somewhere between 15-50 hours where players either quit forever or get pulled into the 300+ hour addiction cycle.
Season 2's free week makes perfect sense in this context. Bungie needs more players to reach that addiction threshold, and the current price barrier is keeping too many potential converts from grinding through the difficult early hours where Marathon's systems finally click.


