Bandai Namco may be the latest big gaming company to face cutbacks. According to a new report by Bloomberg, the Japanese publisher behind the fresh hit Dragon Ball: Sparking Zero, which sold 3 million copies in its first day, recently canceled a project it was working on for Nintendo, as well as other internal games, and is now looking to reduce its headcount as a result. Suggested ReadingI'm So Happy Scare Tactics Is Back Just In Time For HalloweenSuper Mario Party Jamboree Gets A Bunch Of Positive Reviews And Some Really Negative OnesTomb Raider: The Legend Of Lara Croft Traps The Heroine Inside Her Most Boring Adventure YetThe Week In Games: Return To Hyrule
CCShare SubtitlesOffEnglishShare this VideoFacebookTwitterEmailRedditLinkview videoThe Week In Games: Return To HyruleSuggested ReadingI'm So Happy Scare Tactics Is Back Just In Time For HalloweenSuper Mario Party Jamboree Gets A Bunch Of Positive Reviews And Some Really Negative OnesTomb Raider: The Leg…
Metaphor: ReFantazio may be one of the most stylish-looking games ever made, even more so than Persona 5, the incredibly flashy Atlus RPG that preceded it. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it turns out the menus that play a huge role in establishing the visual identities of these games are very hard to make.Suggested ReadingDiablo IV's Big Expansion Faces 'Small Delay' On Launch DayWe Spoiled Joker 2 For Ourselves And Here’s What We Think About That Wild EndingDragon Ball Z Voice Famous For 'Find Out Next Time' Has DiedThe Best Resident Evil Goes VR And More New Releases | The Week In Games
CCShare SubtitlesOffEnglishShare this VideoFacebookTwitterEmailRedditLinkview videoThe Week In Games: The Best Resident Evil Goes VR And More New ReleasesSuggested ReadingDiablo IV's Big Expansion Faces 'Small Delay' On Launch DayWe Spoiled Joker 2 For Ourselves And Here’s What We Think About That Wild EndingDragon Ball Z Voice Famous For 'Find…
In This StoryNTDOYIf you missed it, on September 18, Nintendo and The Pokémon Company announced they are filing a lawsuit against Palworld developer Pocketpair. After months of controversy surrounding the game colloquially known as “Pokémon with guns” and a statement made back in January by the Pokémon Company indicating that it intended to “investigate” the game, it’ss finally taking legal action. Much like when Palworld first came out with its near-identical monsters recontextualized with survival mechanics, an edgier tone, and, yes, firearms, the internet is divided on the matter.Suggested ReadingThe Guy Behind Dead Rising's Iconic Prisoner Song Still Isn't Sure Why Capcom Picked ItZelda-Inspired Plucky Squire Shows What Happens When A Game Doesn't Trust Its PlayersConcord Director Steps Down As Studio Behind Historic PlayStation Flop Waits For Sony's DecisionThe Week In Games: Pocket Monsters And Simulated Goats
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