

That month, the PS2 version was released in Japan, followed by a UK release. Titus Software Corporation published the US Xbox version in July 2003.

In Germany, Titus published RoboCop for Microsoft Windows on April 25, 2003. For the United States, the PS2 version and a GameCube version were cancelled so Titus could focus on the Xbox version. By the following month, the Xbox version had been scheduled for release in April 2003. In November 2002, Titus announced that the game would be released for the Xbox in February 2003. The game would include an original story based on the RoboCop films. By May 2002, the PS2 version remained in development and was known as RoboCop: The Future of Law Enforcement, with an expected release that October. Titus Interactive Studio ultimately became the developer. By April 2001, Infogrames was brought on as the developer of a PS2 version, expected for release in November 2001. Xatrix was expected to develop the game, which would be a first-person shooter. The license included the rights to develop it on all gaming systems, including Dreamcast, Nintendo 64, PlayStation, and PlayStation 2 (PS2). In June 1999, French company Titus Software had acquired the rights for a RoboCop video game, with a release expected for late 2000. RoboCop can also rescue civilians being held as hostages and can arrest enemies who surrender.

RoboCop can use several weapons against enemies, including a pistol, a machine gun, a grenade launcher, and a missile launcher. The player must complete the primary objective to advance through the game, while the other objectives add to the player's final score. Each level consists of one primary objective and several secondary and bonus objectives. If the player is killed, then the level is restarted from the beginning.

The player's progress is saved after the completion of each level. The game features nine large levels, each one divided into several sections. Simultaneously, RoboCop is tasked with investigating connections between a mayoral candidate, Omni Consumer Products (the creator of RoboCop), and Brain Drain. In the game, RoboCop, a cyborg police officer in Neo Detroit, is tasked with finding the people responsible for the spread of a new designer drug known as Brain Drain. RoboCop is a first-person shooter based on the RoboCop films.
