Kind of a dumb article. Most of the games listed are 3rd party games and Sony has no say in when they come out or are delayed.
Also some of the comments on Kotaku are laughable. Complaining that Sony of all companies lacks first party games so they padded their conference with 3rd party content.
If SE was concerned about sales, they would have skipped the Xbox One and made a Switch version.
They're going to wow the audience with gameplay for Death Stranding, Last of Us 2, and Ghost of Tsushima with release dates for all 3. Then they're going to hype up gamers with more Spider-man footage. Then they're going to drop a bomb with Demon's Souls Remake by Bluepoint. Then another bomb with From making Bloodborne 2.
We knew that the night it was announced. It said, "Play it first on PS4."
What it likely means is games like Nier and Dragon Quest will be hitting all platforms in the future.
They're doing an in-depth look at Death Stranding, Last of Us 2, Ghost of Tsushima, and Spider-man which means gameplay demos for sure. We've already seen Spidey in action but it'll be the first time we see the other 3. I think Sony wins E3 with those 3 first-looks by themselves.
Not anyone can put out a game like God of War. You need the talent, the vision, and proper support. Sony can afford to push their first parties because they have so many of them. They'll put out a total of around 10 BIG games for PS4 this gen which means they can give them a lot of time to finish. They can also afford to whiff on a few of them. MS on the other hand doesn't have the first party studio portfolio to do that. Which is of course their fault. Considering they've been in...
The decisions are significant. You can lose characters at multiple points in many different ways that impacts their story (of course) as well as impacts the other characters. You can lock yourself out of large swaths of the game by making certain decisions. Also, little things you do early in the game can come back to aid you or bite you in the ass later. It isn't a situation where you get to the same end regardless of what you do, like in a Telltale game.
I did a full ...
it'll be around a lot longer. 3 years until PS5 is out.
Just watch or read the news. Humans are terrible and treat each other like garbage. Of course humans would be just as bad or worse towards androids.
Kratos. Family. Ash. Skin color doesn't matter.
Kratos is covered in white ash. Chris Judge's skin color doesn't matter.
Why not have Christopher Judge play him? He's a live-action actor, he's done the mo-cap and voice work for this character, and he's got the same build as Kratos (maybe even bigger).
It's not do or die for MS. Whatever "big" game(s) they announce won't be out until at least next year. They've already lost this gen so it's just forming goodwill for the next one.
If Microsoft wins E3 2018 in year 5 of the console cycle, does it really matter? Not really sure they can announce anything that can compete with deep dives into Death Stranding, Ghost of Tsushima, and especially The Last of Us 2. Spider-man will be big but we've seen it in action so I'm not including it for this discussion. And we know that Sony's gonna pull at least one surprise no one expected.
Completely agree. Considering combat is a huge part of an RPG, it lost a lot points for me. I couldn't get through more than 15hrs of it.
PS5 isn't launching this holiday.
Days Gone has already been delayed to 2019. Ghost of Tsushima gameplay will be shown at E3 and a 2018 Q4 release date will be announced.
I would think Sony would want to spread out their tentpole first party offerings. God of War and TLoUII in the same year sounds unlikely. I'd wager Ghost of Tsushima (4 years since Second Son) is a better bet for 2018. Days Gone and TLoUII in 2019. PS5 in 2020.
Yup. It's definitely PS5. Considering Bend's track record with Days Gone, there's no way they can pump out a new game in the next 2 to 3 years. At least not a quality one. If it was a Days Gone sequel, I'd say it's possible since they've got the grunt work done but definitely not something brand new.
The problem is infrastructure, especially in North America. Highspeed internet isn't ubiquitous, not to mention streaming means always on connections. With a lack of highspeed internet coupled with bandwidth caps, a streaming device isn't happening even in the next 10 years.
Also, why would companies like Sony and Nintendo drop hardware which pushes software in favor of a streaming solution? Sony and Nintendo are selling record numbers of their consoles. I highly do...