Whereas some followers are nonetheless holding out hope for a monetary savior to comb in and save Nagoshi Studios’ debut title, Gang of Dragon, extra small particulars have emerged from print and social media this week that paint a really disagreeable image of the studio’s destiny.
Issues have not been trying notably rosy for the upstart Nagoshi Studios–headed by former Yakuza collection creator Toshihiro Nagoshi–for some time now. Following a reveal of their debut title, , at The Recreation Awards, issues quickly seemed very shaky when it was revealed that their main funder, Chinese language large NetEase, was pulling out of additional commitments. Following the sudden vanishing (and reappearance) of their YouTube channel, adopted by their web site going offline, issues have been pointing in a dire path.
The primary indication of additional hassle comes from the fortieth anniversary subject of storied Japanese online game journal Famitsu. As reported by Automaton, the difficulty comprises congratulatory messages from quite a lot of Japanese sport creators, together with Toshihiro Nagoshi. However what’s notable is that Nagoshi, moderately than being listed as hooked up to a studio–such as the one named after him–or freelance like the opposite featured people, is solely listed as “sport creator.”
One other indicator of the studio’s health–or lack thereof–comes from fashionable social media deal-finder/news-breaker Wario64, who observed one thing peculiar within the Twitter profile of studio co-founder and director Daisuke Sato.
With such a high-profile determine now itemizing his involvement with the studio as “ex-,” mixed with Nagoshi’s lack of title in Famitsu, it is hardly a stretch to imagine that Nagoshi Studio is both defunct or working on fumes and praying for a miracle. Both approach, it is unlikely that Gang of Dragon will floor within the big-budget, AAA-game kind that was initially envisioned, if it surfaces in any respect.
With the sport trade as an entire present process a contraction and quite a few storied studios being shuttered, Nagoshi Studios seemingly turning into one other casualty is a depressing–but additionally unsurprising–outcome. Followers of the older-style Yakuza titles might need to look to Stranger than Heaven (which has seen blowback over casting decisions) or Virtua Fighter Crossroads to aim to scratch that itch.
