As part of the same Tokaigi 2015 stream that saw Boku no Natsuyasumi developer Kaz Ayabe talking shop about a dormant winter break-themed spin-off he had once worked on, Sony also had developers involved with the Doko Demo Issyo and Wild Arms series discuss their work, with members of both panels expressing interest in continuing the lineages of their respective games.
"We spoke with Mr. Ayabe recently in an enormous, career-spanning interview, and with Shiro and the Coal Town arriving in the West later this month, we recently got the chance to have Neos' Akira Nagashima answer some questions about the upcoming sequel." - Gavin Lane | NintendoLife
Yooo just seeing this, I'm glad there are games coming out with certain type of graphics I've imagined 😌
Andrew from Rocket Chainsaw talks through his love of some of his favourite games, beginning with his favourite game of all time, Wild Arms.
A franchise Sony need to bring back into the light was pissed the franchise never showed up on Ps3 or PS4
VGChartz's Taneli Palola: "Each of these articles will be centered around a specific theme, whether that's a style of music, a specific console, or just something completely different. Also, at the end of each of these articles, I will pose a video game music related question on something usually related to the theme of the article, which you can answer in the comments below if you so wish. Each article will highlight between five and ten different tracks from various games, in no particular order.
With that in mind, let's start with a theme that's quite timely and relevant right now thanks to the recent release of Red Dead Redemption 2. The American old west has inspired countless different video games and produced some amazing pieces of music over the years, so let's have a listen to just a few such tracks."