Turns out 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:GhostWire: Tokyo – that game whose gameplay reveal trailer from the PS5 event a few weeks back is probably still fresh in your mind, and that looked a little like a horro♕r game – ain't really supposed to be a horror game after allꦐ.
This is kinda weird news, because its trailers thus far have depiꦉcted suitably creepy things like head🐎less Japanese schoolgirls and some sort of black spidery-haired apparition. "" Shinji Mikami – founder of the game's development studio Tango Gameworks – also occupies an executive producer role for the game.
This of course planted more seeds of expectation in us horror fans who thought GhostWire: Tokyo would join the ranks of survival horrors like The Evil Within or 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Resident Evil – which Mikami himself worked on.
According to a with the game's creative director Kenji Kimura, however, GhostWire: Tokyo is officially being shipped a💮s more of an action-adventure game than anything else. Kimura had the following to say on the matter:
GhostWire: Tokyo is an action-adventure game. There are elements of survi🦄val, but not elements that one would expect in the horror genre.
But horror hopefuls – all is not🧸 completely lost, because in the next breath he ad꧅ds:
However, because we are using Japan as the setting, we hope to deliver an experience packed with mysterious and spooky elements based on Japanese Yokai fol𓆏klore, fables, urban legends and famous scary stories.
So while there are clearly som💝e creepy undertones, the focus here is shifted off the whole horror vibe and towards the action-adventure genre. And with this new input from Kimura, does sensibly seem to su🀅pport that claim after all. Perhaps we're just more sensitive towards things that scare us, which could have biased our perception of the whole thing.
What we do know, however, is that it 🌌looks like a dang cool game regardless, and that we'll be leaping at the opportunity to try it out upon its release next year.
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