Eternal Darkness with heartbeat sensor activated insanity effects would actually be really cool.
nah. next-level's next game for new 3ds
Eternal Darkness sold less than half a million copies. I doubt Nintendo would even consider it for a HD remaster.It's one of those HD versions i bet.
I really hope they are making a sequel. I wonder who will develop it?
They could but the paragraph afterwards is a bit scary.
But I can't think why porting to another system wouldn't count as development, if it wasn't a straight emulated game.
It's one of those HD versions i bet.
nah. next-level's next game for new 3ds
Probably Retro or they'll give Next level Games another chance to see if they should be bought up (hopefully).
Wasn't Denis taking about a spiritual successor to Eternal Darkness on some podcast a while ago?
(I may be off the mark here)
If so was he just deflecting and this is the real thing he is working on?
That "technically confirms" in the title is misleading. Extending a copyright on a game you might one day bring to the virtual console store or remaster is not "confirming" anything.
Could a remaster of the original game account for this trademark update?
bombshell
edit: I put so many hours into Eternal Darkness. I hope to see a new title.
Didn't the lead writer for ED get thrown in jail on pedophile charges, and then the whole studio shut down?
In October 2014 it was reported that Denis Dyack had created a new entertainment company Quantum Entanglement Entertainment. One of the company's first projects will be relaunching the development for Shadows of the Eternals. Dyack is also considering Shadows of the Eternals as a film and television property
Nintendo funded Bayonetta 2, Fatal Frame 5 and Devil's Third, so it isn't really that unlikely.Eternal Darkness sold less than half a million copies. I doubt Nintendo would even consider it for a HD remaster.
There's no real need to buy Next-Level, is there? They're only making games for Nintendo now anyway, so what would the point be?
Alexandra Roivas for Smash.
An extension request for a trademark, not a patent. The difference this time is that there is a description of their ongoing efforts to get this mark into commerce. It is a technical confirmation of development, as the title of the thread says. It does not confirm that a game will be released.if I read it correctly, it is another patent extension. they are doing this since the forever, so...what is different this time around?
Retro's new game confirmed.
Retro's new game confirmed.
Those are new games. A remaster of a M-rated decade-old flop isn't the same, especially when there are plenty of better-selling GameCube games to remaster.Nintendo funded Bayonetta 2, Fatal Frame 5 and Devil's Third, so it isn't really that unlikely.