Years of concerns and skepticism melted away when Playground Games finally unveiled its glorious take on the classic RPG series.
More than just a spiritual successor to the Little Nightmares franchise, this upcoming platforming horror title from Tarsier Studios is shaping up to be an absolute treat for horror fans.
According to Windows Central's Jez Corden, Microsoft still has "a pretty decent amount of stuff" that it still has to show in a future event.
Capcom's Koshi Nakanishi also reassures that Leon's gameplay has "exploration scenes, horrific scenes, and backtracking."
"The portrayal of characters, environments, things like that," says director Koshi Nakanishi, evolves from the past two mainline entries.
When it comes to saying goodbye to the decade-long trilogy, Naoki Hamaguchi has said that "there is no wavering" in development.
"These aren’t updates in isolation. They’re part of where Blizzard is heading—together with the players who’ve been here all along."
Koei Tecmo hasn't yet announced a new release date for the title, noting that it needs more time to "further improve the quality".
Game director Cho Yonghee wants players to experience both systems as "part of a unified gameplay loop rather than separate tasks."
Studio founder Ralph Fulton spoke about how "there's no objective good, there's no objective evil," in the world these days.
Xbox's Craig Duncan says it will be an "incredible" and "massively shareable" RPG when it launches this Fall for consoles and PC.
Ralph Fulton recalled the environment art team going "they need what now?" when asked to make 1,000 beds for Fable's NPCs.
Naoki Hamaguchi also confirmed that there will be more mini-games in the third part, including an updated take on snowboarding.
Craig Duncan said that while he wasn't yet ready to reveal more details about State of Decay 3, he is excited about the franchise.
"It’s more beneficial to have something we’re already familiar with and have customized to fit our needs," says Naoki Hamaguchi.
The long-in-development title is important to the publisher "in the context of our strategy centered around Open World Adventures.”
The remake of the 2000 survival horror title is allegedly "deep in development," according to reliable insider NateTheHate.
Upgrading to the Premium Edition costs $50 - an expensive proposition when coupled with Game Pass Ultimate, which costs $30 monthly.
Insider Dusk Golem reports hearing "murmurs" of DLC, but they need updates on its "status" ahead of the sequel's launch.
Two options were available, but Naoki Hamaguchi reveals that after Paris Games Week, Tetsuya Nomura has indeed chosen one.