No Man's Sky is in controversy since its launch, mostly because of massive amount of hype and promised features the game never fully lived up to. In latest the SIE Worldwide Studio's president Shawn Layden has defended the game and spoke of its potential. While some analysts say that it's already too late to make a big update by Hello Games.

Shawn Laden, while speaking on Live with YouTube Gaming, said that he thinks Sean Murray and his team at Hello Games "had an incredible vision of what they were going to create."

He also said that the game was having something that never fully achieved before and defending the team he said that team is having "very huge ambition" despite very small number of actual staff. "

"We don't want to put people into slots where they must execute against an action-adventure path or a fighting path or a shooting path and perhaps over time, it'll reveal itself to be all that it can be," he added.

Hello Games and No Man's Sky director Sean Murray finally broke their silence in the public last month. Analyst Michael Goodman has compared the No Man's Sky to a movie by analyst Michael Goodman, who told We Write Things that the game has died a quiet death.

"When it launched people were talking about how many concurrent users it had and within what two or three weeks it just cratered. We see this in movies all the time.

Goodman has also speculated that No Man's Sky suffered from not having traditional gaming objectives and also it was too repetitive. It's also possible that we could see an update to the multiplayer component, reports Express.

Sean Murray's Hello Games studio is also being investigated by the Advertising Standards Authority and several customers are also having complained to the ASA about the promotional material for the PS4 and PC game.

The No Man's Sky Steam Store page has come under fire for using screenshots that were different from the final release.