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Bungie Confirms Monument of Triumph Is Destiny 2's Final Expansion

Bungie has officially confirmed Monument of Triumph will be the last major expansion for Destiny 2, closing the book on one of gaming's biggest live-service sagas.

·4 min read
Bungie Confirms Monument of Triumph Is Destiny 2's Final Expansion

After nearly a decade of seasonal updates, annual expansions, and enough lore to fill a small library, Destiny 2 is heading toward its final chapter. Bungie has confirmed that Monument of Triumph will be the last major expansion for the game, marking the end of an era for one of gaming's most ambitious live-service experiments.

For the millions of Guardians who have logged thousands of hours raiding, grinding Nightfalls, and chasing exotic drops — this one hits different.

What Bungie Actually Said

Bungie announced Monument of Triumph as the final expansion via a developer update, signaling a deliberate wind-down of Destiny 2 as an evolving live-service platform. The studio has not announced a launch date for the expansion yet, but the confirmation makes clear this is an intentional closing of the chapter rather than a fade into silence.

This follows The Final Shape (2024), which many fans and critics considered the best content the game ever produced — a cathartic conclusion to the Light and Darkness saga that had been building since the original Destiny launched in 2014.

A Journey Almost a Decade in the Making

Destiny 2 launched in 2017 as a full-priced sequel that had a rocky start — critics hammered it for stripping features from the original. But Bungie kept iterating, went free-to-play in 2019, and built something remarkable expansion by expansion:

  • Forsaken (2018) — widely considered the turning point that saved the franchise
  • Shadowkeep, Beyond Light, The Witch Queen — each adding meaningful new mechanics and story depth
  • Lightfall (2023) — a controversial stumble that genuinely worried longtime fans
  • The Final Shape (2024) — a triumphant comeback that closed the main saga on a high note

Through all of it, Destiny 2 maintained one of the most dedicated player communities in gaming. Its gunplay — arguably still the best feel of any shooter on the market — kept people coming back even when the story stumbled.

What This Means for Players

Monument of Triumph being the last expansion does not necessarily mean the servers are shutting down. Bungie will likely maintain the game while shifting focus to whatever comes next. Some seasonal content may continue, and the existing game — now enormous in scope — will remain playable.

But the message is clear: Destiny 2's days as an ever-growing live-service platform are numbered. If you've been meaning to experience a raid or complete the main story, the window is actively closing.

What Is Bungie Building Next?

This is the question everyone is asking. Sony acquired Bungie in 2022 for $3.6 billion, and the relationship has had some turbulence — including rounds of layoffs and reported creative friction. But the studio remains one of the premier first-person shooter developers on the planet.

Destiny 3 is the obvious assumption, though Bungie has not confirmed anything publicly. There have also been hints of entirely new IP in development. Whatever it is, expect it to carry the DNA of everything Destiny 2 got right — the intricate raid design, the satisfying gunplay loop, and the kind of world-building that turns players into lore fanatics.

The End of an Era

Whether you loved every season or bounced off after Forsaken, there's no denying that Destiny 2 shaped the looter-shooter genre for years. It set the template that dozens of games tried to follow — most of them unsuccessfully.

Monument of Triumph will be one last send-off for the Guardians. And given what Bungie pulled off with The Final Shape, there's every reason to believe they will make it count.

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