Category: 4. Technology

  • Weekly poll results: Pixel 10 and 10 Pro score high, 10 Pro XL not so much, Pro Fold in trouble

    Weekly poll results: Pixel 10 and 10 Pro score high, 10 Pro XL not so much, Pro Fold in trouble

    Last week’s poll shows that the four Pixel 10 models will go on different trajectories – and not all of them are pointed towards success.

    A broad view of the series shows that price is a concern – Google didn’t raise the prices compared to the 9-series, but many people have trouble justifying the cost. Even though availability is still limited to only select markets, this didn’t prove to be a huge issue.

    Google’s battery woes (most visible in the a-series) have given it a bad reputation. Worse, the news that Pixel 10 phones will start to gradually restrict battery capacity and charge speed after 200 charge cycles turned even more people away.

    Looking at the phones individually, the Google Pixel 10 will need good reviews to be successful, but it does show a lot of promise. People are curious what the cameras are like with the small 1/2.0” sensor in the main and the new telephoto camera. Based on the poll, the vanilla model has the least to worry about external competition (i.e. non-Pixel phones). That said, depending on how discounts work out, many will be tempted to make the jump to the 10 Pro if the price gap is small enough.

    Google Pixel 10 poll results

    The Google Pixel 10 Pro got the most positive vote and it can only get better – assuming reviews end on a positive note, of course. There are questions whether it’s enough of an upgrade over the 9 Pro, owners of older models will find more reasons to make the switch.

    Google Pixel 10 Pro poll results

    The Google Pixel 10 Pro XL is just a larger version of the Pro, but it received a more muted response. Okay, it’s not just bigger – it’s more expensive too, which definitely pushed some people away.

    Google Pixel 10 Pro XL poll results

    Finally, the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold is facing an uphill battle – most people who want a foldable think there are better options for their money. The chunky build of the Pro Fold certainly didn’t help it either.

    Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold poll results

    Google started delivering Pixel 10 pre-orders earlier this week. We will be having a closer look at the Pixel 10 series soon – stay tuned!

    Google Pixel 10 5G

    Google Pixel 10 Pro 5G

    Google Pixel 10 Pro XL 5G

    Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold

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  • Nexus Anima’ infringes on Nintendo patent: expert

    Nexus Anima’ infringes on Nintendo patent: expert

    HoYoverse has revealed its upcoming title, Honkai: Nexus Anima, but questions have emerged around the game’s use of flying mounts.

    According to a legal expert, the system may fall under the same Nintendo patent currently being disputed in the ongoing Palworld lawsuit.

    Nintendo and The Pokémon Company began legal action against Palworld developer Pocketpair in September 2024.

    The lawsuit centred on multiple alleged patent infringements, including the use of Pal Spheres, which were claimed to resemble Poké Balls too closely. One of the other key issues raised was Nintendo’s patent covering the “mounting of flying objects.”

    The original filing referenced “smoothly switching” between different creatures, but during proceedings, Nintendo amended the patent to extend its scope.

    The revised wording applies to summoning and riding almost any form of flying mount, potentially covering mechanics seen across a range of modern games.

    On August 29, HoYoverse shared the first footage of Honkai: Nexus Anima, which included characters mounting flying creatures.

    Legal analyst Florian Mueller told Games Fray that the mechanic “clearly infringes the amended version of Nintendo’s smooth-switching-of-riding objects patent.”

    However, Mueller also expressed doubts over how enforceable the patent is. He argued that the revised scope is too broad to reasonably restrict game developers.

    “It is a patent on simply being able to summon a flying object and mounting it,” he said. “That is so basic that it cannot be right to prohibit all other game makers from implementing it.”

    The Palworld lawsuit remains ongoing, with no ruling yet on whether Nintendo can enforce its patent claims.

    If the case proceeds in Nintendo’s favour, it could potentially affect other developers, including HoYoverse, who incorporate similar mechanics into their games.

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  • Metal Gear Solid back with remake years after Kojima left Konami

    Metal Gear Solid back with remake years after Kojima left Konami

    Tom GerkenTechnology reporter

    Konami A video game character rendered in modern, high-quality graphics. She has long dirty blonde hair and blue eyes. She is wearing a jacket and has goggles hanging around her neck.Konami

    EVA, one of the main characters in the remade game (image brightened from source)

    Metal Gear is one of the best-selling video game series in history, shifting more than 60 million copies.

    The series pioneered cinematics in gaming by blending cutting-edge cutscenes, voice acting and dynamic camera angles to create something that would have looked more at home on the big screen at the time.

    Metal Gear tackled themes not commonly seen in games, such as nuclear disarmament and child soldiers, and posed philosophical questions while also leveraging offbeat humour.

    The games would often break the fourth wall and ask players to find solutions to puzzles in unusual ways – such as looking on the back cover of the game’s physical box.

    The series’ significant place in gaming history meant fans were stunned when its creator Hideo Kojima quit game publisher Konami in an acrimonious split in 2015.

    One of gaming’s biggest titles was left directionless – and there’s been no game in the best-selling series since.

    But now, a decade later, Konami has released a remake of the third game in the series: Metal Gear Solid Delta.

    So what happened between Konami and Kojima, and how does the new game hold up without its original creator?

    Why did Kojima leave Konami?

    “The impact Metal Gear has had on game-making makes it one of the most heralded entertainment franchises in the world, and made Hideo Kojima one of the industry’s most famous creators,” industry expert Christopher Dring told the BBC.

    With such success, you might think it was a match made in heaven, but there were issues bubbling under the surface.

    While nothing has been said publicly, one generally accepted theory behind the split relates to the spiralling cost of 2015’s Metal Gear Solid V, estimated by some at more than $80m (£59m) – a very significant development cost at the time.

    It is not known exactly what happened between Konami and Kojima, but the studio was clearly fed up with the amount of money he was spending to make a single game – with Kojima’s internal studio actually removed from promotional materials for Metal Gear Solid V at the time.

    Konami got the game out the door, but it seemed to be scaled back from its original vision despite the high cost, with repeated levels and a third chapter that never emerged.

    Even so, the game still received excellent reviews and won several awards, but the rift between company and creator seemed unfixable.

    And in an act that proved highly controversial – and perhaps shows how heated things had become behind the scenes – when Metal Gear Solid V won an award, Konami informed the developer he was not allowed to collect it.

    Getty Images Hideo Kojima. He has black hair in a short cut and wears large black glasses. He is smiling while he talks at a conference. He is wearing a trim black jacket and black t-shirt.Getty Images

    Hideo Kojima has become one of the most famous names in gaming over the past three decades

    A few months later, Kojima was gone, and in the years that followed, his former studio pivoted.

    “Konami shifted its strategy for a while, away from console games, and focused its efforts on the amusements markets, things like pachinko machines,” Mr Dring said.

    “They also focused increasingly on mobile.”

    It meant Konami’s other classic franchises like Castlevania and Silent Hill also went without new games for a decade.

    Meanwhile, Kojima’s new studio signed a blockbuster deal with Sony to develop the monster hit Death Stranding for PlayStation, followed by a sequel this year.

    Why a remake now?

    Gaming has pivoted towards remakes in recent years.

    High-profile games like Resident Evil 4, Final Fantasy VII and Demon’s Souls, all classics in their day, have been remade with the benefits of modern graphics and game design to big fanfare – and strong sales figures.

    “It’s a hugely lucrative and growing sector,” said Mr Dring.

    “The industry is getting older, gamers are entering middle age and are nostalgic for classic titles.

    Mr Drings points out that one of the best-selling games of the year so far is Elder Scrolls V: Oblivion Remastered, a remake of a classic Role-Playing Game (RPG) from 2007, selling millions of copies since its release in April.

    Konami has begun a return to publishing games by focusing in this area, with a Silent Hill remake coming last year and a new Survival Kids game released earlier in 2025.

    So it is a potentially lucrative move – but is Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater the right game to remake?

    Konami A jungle scene from a video game. It is instantly recognisable as an older video game, with blocky rocks and pixel-y trees.Konami

    A jungle scene from Metal Gear Solid 3’s original release in 2004. Believe it or not, these were considered ground-breaking graphics at the time

    Fans of the series told the BBC Metal Gear Solid 3 was chosen for good reason.

    YouTuber Zak Ras said there was “immense significance” behind the game.

    “Most people will say their favourite entry to the series is either Metal Gear Solid 1 or 3,” he said.

    “Story-wise, given that it’s the first prequel set at the very beginning of the series timeline, it’s one of the few entries you can go into completely blind with absolutely no required knowledge of the series, other than very first Metal Gear from 1987.”

    Ras said Metal Gear Solid 3 struck a good balance between gameplay and cinematic storytelling, making it a good choice for people who have never played a game in the series before.

    For example, the game opens with an introduction heavily influenced by James Bond films, meaning new fans are eased into the series’ weirder elements.

    And the brothers behind PythonSelkan Studios – known as Python & Selkan to their 122,000 YouTube subscribers – agreed.

    “Completing the game was an incredible experience in itself,” they said. “Snake Eater’s gut-wrenching ending is what stood out most, leaving an impact on us that no other game had ever left before.”

    “This game holds a special place in our hearts,” they added.

    Metal Gear without Kojima

    The brothers said, as lifelong fans of the series, they were “incredibly excited” by the announcement.

    The pair are currently playing the remake, and have been “very impressed” by its improved graphics and audio.

    They described the game as a “truly a faithful recreation”, adding that it improved “the essence of the original without changing its fundamental structure”.

    Konami A jungle scene rendered in a video game. In the foreground, photo-realistic plants grow in front of a large tree. Several trees in the background are broken up by a beam of light.Konami

    The game’s lush jungle setting has benefitted from two decades of improvements in graphical fidelity

    So far so good for Metal Gear Solid without Hideo Kojima – which Ras put down to the game being true to the original.

    One example he highlights is that the voice performances have been kept the same, and players can choose whether to use the original control scheme or a more modern take.

    “There’s no doubt it is Kojima’s directorial ‘genes’ that are being dominantly expressed here,” he said.

    “Kojima expressed a desire to move on from Metal Gear since as early as MGS2 and leave the series in the hands of others to continue.

    “It may have taken him another 14 years and five director credits for that to happen, but it is now reality.”

    And however the remake fares with fans, one household won’t be picking up a new copy – Kojima himself has laughed off the suggestion that he would play the new game.

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  • Linux 6.17 Adds Support For Logitech G PRO 2 LIGHTSPEED, Wacom Art Pen 2 & More

    Linux 6.17 Adds Support For Logitech G PRO 2 LIGHTSPEED, Wacom Art Pen 2 & More

    This week’s round of HID subsystem “fixes” for the in-development Linux 6.17 kernel include adding a number of new device IDs and other alterations for supporting new hardware.

    Besides fixing memory corruption problems with the Intel THC driver and other HID drivers, addressing some Intel ISH power management issues, and more, there are also some new device ID additions and device-specific quirks making the pull more notable.

    First up, as part of the quirks is support for the Lenovo Legion Go dual detachable input modes. With the commit now in the mainline Linux kernel by Antheas Kapenekakis, explains:

    “The Legion Go features detachable controllers which support a dual dinput mode. In this mode, the controllers appear under a single HID device with two applications.

    Currently, both controllers appear under the same event device, causing their controls to be mixed up. This patch separates the two so that they can be used independently.

    In addition, the latest firmware update for the Legion Go swaps the IDs to the ones used by the Legion Go 2, so add those IDs as well.”

    Another notable addition is adding support for the Logitech G PRO 2 LIGHTSPEED wireless mouse. This works with either its nano receiver or directly connected.

    The Logitech G PRO 2 LIGHTSPEED is a ~$120 USD wireless gaming mouse.

    The ELECOM M-DT2DRBK is another wireless mouse now properly working under Linux. The ELECOM M-DT2DRBK features eight buttons and a rather interesting design while only setting you back around $40 USD. The support with Linux 6.17 is due to the mouse only having five buttons detected up to now rather than all eight.

    The Wacom Art Pen 2 tablet is another device now supported on Linux 6.17 with this week’s HID updates.

    All the details on this week’s HID fixes for Linux 6.17 can be found via this Git merge.

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  • Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2 chip set to break the 4m barrier in AnTuTu

    Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2 chip set to break the 4m barrier in AnTuTu

    Qualcomm Snapdragon chip (Image Source: Qualcomm)

    While its name remains debated, Qualcomm’s upcoming flagship chip (Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2/Snapdragon 8 Gen 5) has reportedly set a new benchmark, scoring over 4 million on AnTuTu. Get a first look at the powerful specs behind this record-breaking chip, including a special variant destined for the Galaxy S26 series.

    Qualcomm’s next flagship smartphone chip is on the way, and the pieces of the puzzle keep emerging. A recent leak suggested the chip could have a completely different and unexpected name: Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. Now, a new report has revealed the groundbreaking performance of the chip formerly known as Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2, setting a new benchmark for mobile processors.

    Snapdragon 8 Elite 2 (or Snapdragon 8 Gen 5) tipped to surpass 4 million AnTuTu score

    The latest report from tipster Digital Chat Station points to an astonishing 4 million+ score on the AnTuTu benchmark for the Snapdragon 8 Elite 2 or Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 (whatever it’s called). To put that in perspective, this score is significantly higher than the top-end chips currently on the market (2.5 – 3 million).

    Beyond just a single number, the leak also gave us a look at the core specs behind that impressive score. The standard version of the chip will reportedly feature a configuration with two “Prime” cores clocked at 4.61GHz and six high-performance cores at 3.63GHz. Once again, Qualcomm will forget about dedicated “low power” cores. For graphics, a powerful Adreno 840 GPU clocked at 1.2GHz may deliver a nice gaming upgrade.

    As in recent years, a more powerful variant of the chip is rumored to be in the works, exclusive to the upcoming Galaxy S26 series. This special “for Galaxy” model will give Samsung’s next flagship a temporary performance edge with even faster Prime cores clocked at 4.74GHz. This move continues the partnership between Qualcomm and Samsung, bringing an exclusive benefit to one of the biggest names in the smartphone world. Plus, this version of the chip will be available for other Android brands later.

    The new chip is scheduled to make its official debut on September 23 at the Snapdragon Summit 2025.

    Digital Chat Station on Weibo

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  • Report shows 90% of European gaming revenue in 2024 was digital purchases, but only 15% was on PC

    Report shows 90% of European gaming revenue in 2024 was digital purchases, but only 15% was on PC

    New data shows gaming revenue has moved almost entirely to digital purchases, at least in Europe, with PC and console purchases dwarfed by mobile gaming. The 2024 All About Video Games report, published earlier this month by Video Games Europe, showed sluggish growth for PC gaming in the EU and signaled the death knell for physical game sales.

    According to the report, gaming revenue overall grew 4% in 2024. An overwhelming 90% of that revenue was digital, up 5% from 2023 and bringing physical purchases down to just 10%.

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  • Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 receives second One UI 8 beta update

    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 receives second One UI 8 beta update

    The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip6 recently received the second One UI 8 beta update, and now it’s the Galaxy Z Fold6 that’s receiving the Android 16-based One UI 8 Beta 2 update.

    The update has firmware version F956BXXU2ZYHB and requires a download of about 930MB. It comes with the September 2025 Android security patch and fixes some bugs. You can check the screenshot below for more details.


    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 One UI 8 Beta 2 update's changelog

    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 One UI 8 Beta 2 update’s changelog

    This beta update for the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 is currently seeding in India, but the rollout should expand to other regions soon.

    Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6

    If you are enrolled in the One UI 8 beta program and haven’t received the second One UI 8 beta update on your Galaxy Z Fold6 yet, you can check for it manually by heading to the phone’s Settings > Software update menu.

    Samsung Galaxy Z Flip6

    Via

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  • Bloober Team Eyes More Horror Games on Nintendo Switch 2

    Bloober Team Eyes More Horror Games on Nintendo Switch 2

    Cronos: The New Dawn is just the beginning, as Bloober Team plans to bring more of its horror games to Nintendo Switch 2.

    The topic came up in an interview with The Game Business, where CEO Piotr Babieno shared his personal wish to help create a new golden age for horror games on Nintendo consoles. He explained that this dream goes back to his childhood as a Nintendo fan. Babieno grew up with Nintendo systems and sees titles like Eternal Darkness, Resident Evil 0, and Resident Evil 4 on GameCube as part of a great time for horror fans.

    Babieno said:

    I’m trying to make my personal dreams come true. I am a huge Nintendo fan. I grew up with Nintendo consoles. The most important horrors, like Eternal Darkness, Resident Evil 0, Resident Evil 4… were available on Nintendo GameCube. It was a gold time for Nintendo fans. In some ways, we would like to be the one to open a new chapter for Nintendo right now.

    He added:

    We have some plans. We are not able to share our vision for the future yet. But definitely Nintendo fans could take a look at Bloober Team.

    Bloober TeamThe first horror title from the studio set to arrive on Switch 2 will be Cronos: The New Dawn, which launches on September 5th, 2025 for PC (Steam and Epic Games Store), PS5, and Xbox Series X|S.

    A limited physical version of the game, distributed by Skybound Games, will be released exclusively for PS5, and is currently available for pre-order through most major retailers.

    As for what comes next, well just have to wait and see.

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  • Home Assistant isn’t just for hardware; make it part of your back-to-school prep

    Home Assistant isn’t just for hardware; make it part of your back-to-school prep

    Home Assistant has a reputation for primarily blinking your lights and automating your blinds, but that’s not all it can do. While that’s certainly fun, its capabilities go far beyond smart home automation, despite the name. Thanks to all of the software you can link up to it, too, its power can also be utilized by students looking to improve their organization. You can centralize classes, deadlines, chores, travel time, laundry, and notifications in one place, entirely local and private. Start with a phone, a calendar feed, and a simple dashboard, and you’re already in a great place going into a new school year.

    As for why you’d use Home Assistant for this, the answer is simple: it reduces your daily cognitive load. It pulls classes and deadlines from a calendar, shows you what’s happening now and next, reminds you to leave based on traffic and rain, and can even do things like send you a notification when your clothes wash finishes. It’s local-first, so there’s no trading privacy for convenience, and you can even add multiple users if you want to share it with friends, family, or even housemates.

    A minimal setup is needed

    Start with a dashboard and a basic reminder to leave

    The beauty of this particular setup is that you don’t even need any crazy hardware to get it working. A Raspberry Pi, a spare mini PC, an old laptop, or a Docker container on a NAS all work, and you can install the Android or iOS companion app for presence, sensors, and push notifications. After that, simply import a Google Calendar or any iCal link from your school or LMS, or link your Google account to Home Assistant.

    We’ll start with a simple dashboard that answers what’s likely to be the most important question of the day: What’s happening today? It’ll contain your calendar, your to-do list, and you can even automate the populating of your to-do list based on your calendar items for the day. Maybe a specific class requires you to bring in a specific book or tool, and your to-do list can automatically be populated based on what’s coming that day. For when it’s time to head to class, you can create an automation that pulls from your calendar and notifies your phone, looking something like this:

    alias: "Class starts in 30"
    mode: single
    trigger:
    - platform: calendar
    entity_id: calendar.classes
    event: start
    offset: "-00:30:00"
    action:
    - service: notify.mobile_app_your_phone
    data:
    title: "Heads up: {{ trigger.calendar_event.summary }}"
    message: "Starts in 30 min at {{ trigger.calendar_event.location | default('') }}."

    If you take public transport, you can also link Home Assistant to many public transport providers. Here in Ireland, I can link it up to the train service, but there are integrations for practically every country that will allow you to add buses and trains to your Home Assistant. That way, you can even set up automations that will tell you when to leave.

    Building a Pomodoro timer

    Work in sprints

    Pomodoro technique homepage on website

    Next up, you can easily build a Pomodoro timer that will silence your phone for your specified length of time. Pomodoro timers are great for productivity, working on assignments, or studying, and you can do it through a Home Assistant automation, triggered by a specific event or even via a button. Create an input_boolean helper called “focus mode”, and a timer called “pomodoro”.

    alias: "Focus mode: ON"
    trigger:
    - platform: state
    entity_id: input_boolean.focus_mode
    to: "on"
    action:
    - service: timer.start
    target: { entity_id: timer.pomodoro }
    - service: notify.mobile_app_your_phone
    data:
    title: "Focus started"
    message: "25 minute work"
    - service: notify.mobile_app_your_phone
    data:
    message: command_dnd
    title: priority_only

    This will then turn on focus mode, silence notifications from your phone, and last for 25 minutes. When the 25 minutes are over, you can trigger the next automation:

    alias: "Focus mode: OFF"
    trigger:
    - platform: event
    event_type: timer.finished
    event_data:
    entity_id: timer.pomodoro
    action:
    - service: input_boolean.turn_off
    target: { entity_id: input_boolean.focus_mode }
    - service: notify.mobile_app_your_phone
    data:
    message: command_dnd
    title: off
    - service: notify.mobile_app_your_phone
    data:
    title: "Pomodoro finished"
    message: "Take a break!"

    You can also pair this with a light if you want visual feedback that your Pomodoro timer has finished.

    Linking to your email

    More automations, or just collect information

    An email summary generated using a local LLM and Home Assistant

    Home Assistant has an IMAP integration so that you can trigger automations and events based on what you receive. You can trigger automations based on important emails, such as a change to a class start time, a cancellation, or anything that you’d like.

    What this kind of automation looks like depends entirely on what you care about and what kind of emails you receive. You can use it to spot newsletters and promotional material or pair it with a local language model for parsing information to pull out only what you need. You could even set it up specifically to pull your assignment results when they’re released, and display them in Home Assistant.

    All of this is a bit more advanced, but it gives you an idea of just how well Home Assistant can work with your email to extract useful information. The basic IMAP integration is easy, though, and you can simply dump everything into Home Assistant based on a sender if class alerts come from specified addresses.

    Home Assistant can do so much more than just hardware

    It’s perfect for software, too

    A photo of Home Assistant showing weather report generated using local LLM

    The bottom line is that without any hardware, Home Assistant can link up to all kinds of services, and there are countless integrations out there specifically built for bringing together software under the one roof. It doesn’t have to just be smart home devices and hardware, and some of my most powerful integrations are basic ones that link to Google Calendar and the weather.

    For organizational purposes, Home Assistant has been one of the best quality-of-life improvements I’ve made. It helps me keep track of my work, helps me debug and test my self-hosted services, and allows me to build and test my own devices, if that’s something you’re interested in.

    Home Assistant is completely free and open source, so if you think it’s something that can help, it’s worth trying. It may not be perfect for what you need, but it might just get the job done.

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  • What happens when the manga publisher behind One Piece and Dragon Ball gets into gaming? PAX West 2025 attendees can find out for themselves

    What happens when the manga publisher behind One Piece and Dragon Ball gets into gaming? PAX West 2025 attendees can find out for themselves

    If there’s one thing that fans might expect from a manga publisher, it’s to push into new media via animation or filmmaking, but one of the largest manga publishers in Japan is looking to a different medium altogether with one of its latest ventures, as attendees at PAX West 2025 can discover for themselves, with Shueisha Games demonstrating that gaming can add new audiences — and an entirely new international base of creators — to its already extensive library.

    “We’re a subsidiary company of Shueisha, which is the manga publisher for stuff like One Piece, Dragon Ball, Naruto, and the entire Shonen Jump,” Alonzo Omotegawa, community development associate at the company, tells Popverse on the show floor at the Seattle Convention Center. “One of the CEOs and the top people on the board was thinking, ‘Well, we’re good at publication with all these creative mangas and stories — why can’t we do that for the video game industry, specifically for indies?’ Japan actually doesn’t really have much of a support background for indie developers. We wanted to change that.”

    The company is showing off six titles at PAX West: Bakudo, Sekiro Dodgeball, Atmosfar, No Straight Roads 2, Opus — “a deep, emotional, story adventure, basically about a guy losing his way and his life, but ended up in this crazy ethereal realm… think of it as like Spirited Away with camera mechanics” — and Omotegawa’s personal favorite, ANTHEM#9, which he describes as “a puzzle gem match deck builder, as if the gameplay is going to be like Candy Crush and Slay the Spire had a baby.”

    “Our focus is to bring really talented indie developers based in Tokyo and bring that out to the world,” Omotegawa said. “But we also don’t want to just, I guess, cut out opportunity just focusing on Tokyo people. We also want it with international people. So, Atmosfar is a developer based in Sweden, Opus and Vapid are developers based in Taiwan, Metronomik is based in Malaysia. Our main focus is basically this saying we have in the company: Shaving off diamonds in the rough and bring that brightness to the world.”

    Shueisha Games can be found at Booth 525 in the Arch Exhibitor Hall of the Seattle Convention Center through September 1, and online at Sheuiesha Games’ website for those not lucky enough to get to PAX West 2025.


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