Ghostwire: Tokyo will have dynamic 4K and ray tracing on PS5
Ghostwire: Tokyo, a game that was revealed by E3's best living highlight reel Ikumi Nakamura back in the ancient year of 2019, just received some updated details on the PlayStation Store.
Ghostwire: Tokyo, a game that was revealed by E3's best living highlight reel Ikumi Nakamura back in the ancient year of 2019, just received some updated details on the PlayStation Store.
A very sneaky little reveal but given all the spooks and ghosts in the game, it makes sense that a subtle announcement was more in order.
January’s a bit of a dry month, but for the rest of the year? There’s some dang good content on the way. Arkane’s version of Groundhog Day, Ubisoft’s return to madcap acid trips with guns, and the twilight of the gods boy, are just some of the highlights on the horizon. So here’s a rundown, of what to expect this year.
For the last couple of years, Microsoft has been a bit of a punching bag when it comes to talking about console-exclusive games. Sony has…all of this, Nintendo’s got an undeniable talent for selling you the same game several times over multiple generations and Microsoft has a world premiere of a Halo Infinite delay.
Over on Twitter, Ghostwire: Tokyo director and E3 human highlight reel Ikumi Nakamura tweeted a few more creepy concepts of what the game is aiming for, along with a snippet of static gameplay that she described as “Raptured Apocalypse + Near Future Tokyo + Supernatural”.
Just what does legendary video game developer Shinji Mikami have up his sleeve alongside Tango Studio? Not a straight-up supernatural survival-horror game like the last two chapters in The Evil Within series, but something that blends action with the paranormal. Say hello, and maybe hide behind your couch, at Ghostwire Tokyo!
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A spooky European village. Properly scary castle mania. Vampires. Werewolves! The only thing more frightening, is a glimpse at your empty bank account when it comes to deciding whether or not you can grab Resident Evil Village this month. Capcom's successor to its long-running survival-horror franchise is finally out, and if you've read our review then you know the game is a winner on multiple levels.
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