Quick answer: Monitor the health and latency of third-party dependencies and alert on degradation, so you detect and mitigate their problems quickly.
When a third party goes down, your game can too — if you do not see it coming. Monitoring dependencies gives you warning. Here is how.
How to fix it
1. Monitor each dependency
Track availability and latency of every critical external service.
2. Alert on degradation
Alert when a dependency slows or fails so you can respond.
3. Plan fallbacks
Have degradation strategies so a dependency outage does not take the whole game down.
Catching the ones you can't reproduce
The hardest version of this to fix is the one you can't reproduce — it only happens on a player's hardware, OS, driver, or save state, under conditions that simply aren't present on your machine. A report that says “it crashed” or “it froze” gives you nothing to act on, so the bug survives release after release while quietly costing you players.
Automatic error capture closes that gap. Each failure arrives with its full stack trace, the device and OS, the build number, and a breadcrumb trail of what the player did right before it broke, so even a failure you have never seen becomes a specific, reproducible issue. Fold identical failures into one signature ranked by how many players each hits, and your worklist sorts itself worst-first instead of arriving as a stream of vague complaints.
This is where a tool like Bugnet earns its place. Its SDK captures every backend error automatically with the full stack trace plus device, OS, memory, build, and game-state context, folds duplicates into one grouped issue with an occurrence count, and ties each to the build it first appeared on — so you fix the problem that hurts the most players first and confirm it is gone when its signature disappears from the next release.
The bug you can't reproduce isn't gone — it's just invisible until you capture it from the player's device.