GameSpot may receive revenue from affiliate and advertising partnerships for sharing this content and from purchases through links.

Destiny 2's Trials Of Osiris Is Back This Weekend, But With An Adjustment

Players have been finding exploits in Destiny 2's toughest competitive challenge, leading to Bungie disabling the mode for several weeks this season.

2 Comments

After several weeks of being disabled, Destiny 2 is finally bringing back Trials of Osiris. However, it'll be a little less forgiving than usual. Bungie is reinstating the top-tier competitive mode, but you won't be able to rejoin matches if your connection has been lost mid-game.

Bungie made the announcement on its Bungie Help Twitter account. The developer said it's disabling the match rejoin function for now, but intends to reinstate it with an update to the game in the future.

As of March 20, it appears this is still the case. For the first time in several weeks, Bungie has not canceled the Trials of Osiris.

Trials, which challenges players to try to win seven competitive multiplayer matches in a row with no losses to earn some of Destiny 2's best loot, has been plagued with issues this season. For the last four weeks, Bungie has disabled the mode because of players who found ways to exploit it, trading wins without competing for easy Flawless runs. Bungie brought Trials back on the weekend of March 12, only to quickly disable it again when it became clear players were still finding ways to cheat.

That's left some players worried that they might miss their chances at Trials rewards this season, since different pieces of loot become available each week--and some are the very best guns you can get in Destiny 2. But Bungie has said that it's taking steps to make sure all the loot is available for players despite the delays.

Bungie has had a hard time with Trials for a while--the mode returned to the game in 2020 after the release of the Shadowkeep expansion, and before the similar mode, the Trials of the Nine, had been disabled since 2018. The mode is notoriously difficult, which puts off your average Destiny 2 Guardian, and it has seen more than its share of exploits and cheating since its reinstatement. Bungie recently said it is increasing the size of its team dedicated to stopping cheating in Destiny 2, which will hopefully help make the Trials a little fairer.

Got a news tip or want to contact us directly? Email news@gamespot.com

Join the conversation
There are 2 comments about this story