Rock Band 4 will be de-listed this week, now’s your last chance to grab song packs
Rock Band 4 is set to disappear from digital storefronts this week, with the developer confirming that the rhythm classic is being removed from sale due to expiring music licenses. If you’ve been eyeing any remaining DLC tracks or packs, the clock is officially ticking.
Originally launched in 2015 for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, the game kept the plastic-instrument party alive for a new generation and maintained support for a sprawling library of downloadable songs. That catalogue — along with the base game — will no longer be available to purchase after 5 October. The delisting covers both the core title and the DLC store.
If you already own Rock Band 4, there’s no need to panic. Your game will remain in your library, and previously purchased songs will continue to be accessible and playable. You’ll still be able to redownload owned content after the delisting, just as you would any other purchased digital item tied to your account.
What the delisting actually means
- You won’t be able to buy Rock Band 4 digitally after 5 October.
- DLC song purchases will also be cut off on that date.
- Anything you already own stays in your library and should remain downloadable.
- Physical copies are unaffected by the digital store removal.
- No changes have been announced to gameplay features; this move concerns sales availability rather than functionality.
Why this is happening
Music games live and die by licensing agreements. Every song, pack, and many elements of a game’s soundtrack are tied to contracts with labels, publishers, and artists. Those deals typically run for fixed terms. When they expire, renewing them can be complex or cost-prohibitive, which is why older music games often vanish from sale over time.
Last-minute tips for grabbing songs
- Prioritize your must-have tracks: focus on favorite artists or multi-song bundles to maximize value.
- Use the in-game store’s sorting and preview options to build a quick hit list.
- Confirm you’re signed into the account where you want the licenses to live.
- Download your purchases promptly to avoid any day-one scramble or server congestion.
- If you play on newer hardware via backward compatibility, ensure your entitlements carry over on your platform of choice.
A farewell note to a long-running setlist
Across nearly a decade, Rock Band 4 sustained an impressive cadence of weekly DLC, the Rivals expansion’s competitive seasons, and cross-generation instrument support that let fans keep their band together. The game’s library spanned genre classics, modern hits, and deep cuts, turning living rooms into stages and friend groups into tour-ready crews.
The developer has thanked the community for years of support, highlighting the dedication of players who chased high scores, coordinated full-band runs, and filled leaderboards week after week. If there’s a track you’ve always meant to add to your collection, now is the moment to lock it in before the store closes its curtains.
The bottom line
After 5 October, you won’t be able to buy Rock Band 4 or its DLC digitally, but your existing library remains yours. For fans, this is the final encore to secure any last songs and preserve a slice of rhythm-game history. Tune your plastic axes, check your wishlist, and make your picks while the music is still playing.