Over the years, Telltale Games has made a huge name for itself in the gaming industry with its creative character designs and location settings, engaging dialogue, and its enjoyable use of puzzle solving and storytelling. However, a number of gamers and critics alike have stated that the usual narrative-directed approach to the games has become dated. Many fans of the Telltale games, including myself, don’t seem to think this is true at all.
Here are three reasons why Telltale doesn’t need to change their gameplay.
Warner Bros. Games has set a new leadership team and restructured around Harry Potter, "Game of Thrones," "Mortal Kombat" and the DC Universe IPs.
Shift Up once again proves that they appreciate their team, as they have just rewarded their developers with new Nintendo Switch 2s to celebrate the Stellar Blade sales reaching 3 million.
Marathon was slated to launch on Sept. 23, 2025 across Xbox, PC, and PlayStation, but Bungie will share the new release date in the fall.
If they were absolutely certain about the quality of Marathon, then they had not delayed it just now.
So they've basically just confirmed what everyone, well, a lot of people saw: Marathon is not ready yet, still no soul to be seen.
If you can even call it "gameplay"
They need to update their engine, though.
That's quite the hustle they've got there.
Its Casual "Cash Grab" games.
I wouldn't even take there games for free.
Pfffft! Gameplay...the words gameplay and telltale should never be in the same sentence. They should stop pretending their games are ACTUAL games and just call them minimally interactive short stories.
I played a demo for one of the Telltale games. It was so boring I literally almost fell asleep. So yeah not buying one of their "games" anytime soon