ARK Survival Ascended Roadmap 2026: Maps, Bob’s Tall Tales & What Hosts Should Plan For
The ARK Survival Ascended 2026 roadmap at a glance — confirmed map drops, Bob’s Tall Tales chapters, mod-stack changes, and the practical hardware impact for dedicated-server admins.

How Studio Wildcard Communicates
Wildcard publishes Community Crunches on Friday or Saturday — wide-ranging blog posts covering current state, upcoming maps, mod-of-the-month, and CCC (Creature Creation Contest) winners. The roadmap exists as a multi-image graphic shared every 6-8 weeks rather than a continuous public document.
Where the Game Stands Now
ARK Survival Ascended (ASA) launched October 2023 as the Unreal Engine 5 successor to ARK Survival Evolved. Since then Wildcard has shipped a steady cadence of map remasters (The Island, Scorched Earth, The Center, Aberration, Extinction) plus the original Bob’s Tall Tales storyline (Frontier, Lost Colony, etc.).
What’s Confirmed for 2026
1. Remaining Map Remasters
Genesis Part 1, Genesis Part 2, and Ragnarok are the most-asked remasters on the public roadmap. At least one is confirmed for 2026; the others are slated for “in development” without firm dates. Each map drop adds new dinos, new biomes, and meaningful save-size + RAM impact on dedicated servers.
2. Continued Bob’s Tall Tales Chapters
The narrative DLC arc continues. Wildcard has confirmed additional chapters past Lost Colony, with original premium content rather than ASE remasters.
3. Mod Ecosystem Maturation
CurseForge for ASA continues to grow. Wildcard’s stated 2026 priority is improving mod-stack stability — the current “mod load order matters and breaks silently” pain is on the bug-fix list.
4. Performance & Stability Pass
Always-on for ASA. UE5 + dino AI density is hard on hardware; Wildcard has been candid that performance is a continuous focus rather than a one-time pass.
What’s Strongly Hinted
- Console mod parity — currently mods are PC-first; console parity is on the long-term ask list
- Cluster transfer improvements — current cross-map character/dino transfer has rough edges; expected refinements
- New official creatures — Wildcard has hinted at original ASA-only creatures beyond CCC winners
What Server Admins Should Plan For in 2026
Hardware: ASA is the heaviest game on this list
ASA is brutal on hardware. Even unmodded vanilla servers running The Island for 16 players regularly hit 12-16 GB RAM. Each new map remaster widens the curve. Practical thresholds:
- 1-8 players, 1-2 maps, vanilla → Plan M minimum
- 16-32 players, 2-3 maps, modest mods → Plan L
- Cluster of 4+ maps with mods → Plan L minimum, multiple servers, often top tier
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See ASA plans →Cluster planning matters more in 2026
If you run a community across multiple maps, the cluster topology decision has long-term consequences. Add new maps to existing clusters carefully — character/dino transfer compatibility resets sometimes need server restarts and data migration. Plan a maintenance window when adding the next map.
Mod stability — pin your mod versions
The #1 cause of ASA server crashes in 2026 is silently-incompatible mod versions on map drops. Keep a version manifest of your active mod set, and lock-in updates on a per-map maintenance schedule rather than auto-updating. Read our ASA admin wiki for the mod-pinning playbook.
Save backups: ASA saves are huge
ASA save files balloon fast — multi-GB per map after a few months of community play. Hourly backups are essential, and 30-day retention is the floor for serious communities.
How to Track the Roadmap
- Community Crunch on the official ARK site (every Friday/Saturday)
- Steam News — patch announcements: store.steampowered.com/app/2399830/ARK_Survival_Ascended
- Roadmap graphics — Wildcard posts these every 6-8 weeks on Twitter/X and the official Discord
- r/playark — datamines surface here
Bottom Line
ARK Survival Ascended in 2026 is the year of remaining map remasters, continued Bob’s Tall Tales chapters, and incremental UE5 stability gains. The headline action item for hosts: budget for the highest hardware tier you can sustain — ASA is the most resource-hungry game we host, and each new map raises the floor further.