Final Fantasy 9 Out Today On Switch, Final Fantasy 7 Coming Next Month

Back in September, Square Enix announced it will bring a slate of modern-era Final Fantasy games to Nintendo Switch (as well as Xbox One) in 2019, including the classic PS One entries Final Fantasy VII and Final Fantasy IX. The former was recently featured in a new Switch commercial that teased it would hit the console “soon,” and now we know exactly when.

During the latest Direct presentation, Nintendo revealed that Final Fantasy VII is launching for Switch next month, on March 26. The spin-off Chocobo’s Mystery Dungeon: Every Buddy is also set to arrive next month, on March 20, but fans won’t have to wait that long to play Final Fantasy IX; that game will be available in the Switch Eshop later today, February 13.

Beyond those titles, Square Enix is also bringing Final Fantasy X, X-2, and XII: The Zodiac Age to both Switch and Xbox One this year. The X and X-2 HD Remaster collection will arrive on April 16, with Final Fantasy XII following several weeks later, on April 30. The publisher has also previously announced a PS4 and Switch port of Final Fantasy: The Crystal Chronicles, but no release date has been confirmed yet.

That wasn’t the only Square Enix news to come out of the latest Nintendo Direct. We also learned that Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age Definitive Edition will launch for Switch this fall, while the Minecraft-like spin-off Dragon Quest Builders 2 is coming on July 12.

Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice Announced for Nintendo Switch

Nintendo’s February 13 Direct offered plenty of surprises, including the reveal that the originally PS4-console-exclusive Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice will be coming to the Nintendo Switch in 2019.

Revealed during a suite of third-party announcements for Switch, Nintendo confirmed that Ninja Theory’s third-person action-exploration game will be released for the Switch this spring.

Hellblade originally came to the PS4 and PC in 2017, followed by a release on Xbox One in 2018.

Hellblade follows Senua, a celtic warrior on a quest into Helheim. The adventure takes advantage of binaural audio design to create a sense of 3D sound that is intrinsically tied to the main character, who suffers from psychosis and hears voices throughout her journey.

Continue reading…

Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice Announced For Nintendo Switch

During the February 2019 Nintendo Direct, the company announced that Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice will be getting a Switch release. The acclaimed action game, which explores mental illness in a Norse mythology setting, has a release window of Spring 2019.

Nintendo didn’t provide many details about the port during the presentation. Hellblade was originally a PlayStation 4 console exclusive (that was also available on PC), and it came to Xbox One in April 2018.

GameSpot awarded it an 8/10 in our Hellblade review, calling it “a spellbinding and sympathetic game about loss and redemption.” It was also one of GameSpot’s top 10 games of 2017.

Stay tuned for more news from the Nintendo Direct, which began with the announcement of Super Mario Maker 2 for Switch. We also learned a lot more about Fire Emblem: Three Houses, including a release date.

Deltarune: Chapter 1 Announced For Switch, Will Be Free

During a Nintendo Direct packed with big Switch news, the company also revealed that Toby Fox’s Deltarune will be coming to the handheld and console hybrid. Chapter 1 of the Undertale follow-up will be available for free, while later chapters–which are “currently in development”–will not. In true Toby Fox fashion, the announcement was made with “a censored, spoiler-free trailer” featuring tons of Undertale’s Annoying Dog, which was later confirmed to not be in Deltarune at such high quantities.

Undertale, which first released on PC in 2015, came to Switch in September 2018. Deltarune: Chapter 1 is getting its port much more quickly; it first released late last year on PC to a very excited Undertale fanbase. Toby Fox stated that the game is far from finished and that Chapter 1 is a demo for what’s hopefully to come.

Deltarune: Chapter 1 will release on the Switch Eshop on February 28. We loved what we saw when we first played it on PC.

In other Direct news, Nintendo has announced Super Mario Maker 2 for Switch and given far more details about Fire Emblem: Three Houses.

A Battle Royale Tetris Is Coming to Nintendo Switch Today

A new battle royale is coming, but you’ll need to sharpen your Tetris skills to survive among the pack.

Nintendo revealed Tetris 99 during its Feb. 13 Direct, which will be available later today as a free-to-play game for Nintendo Switch Online members.

Tetris 99 sees 99 players competing in a game of Tetris — completing lines will cause blocks to fill up the screens of opponents. Do your best to prevent your screen from filling up and persevere as the crowd of 99 players is whittled down each time to just one winner.

Tetris 99, naturally, features online competitive play, and will feature upcoming events to keep the experience fresh.

Tetris 99 is, of course, not the only recent surprise battle royale game. Respawn Entertainment’s Apex Legends, which features first-person shooting rather than 2D puzzle block building, launched as a free-to-play experience last week, and has seen impressive player counts since its launch.

Continue reading…

Marvel Revives the Original Star Wars Comic

Marvel Comics is going old-school with its latest Star Wars project. Today the publisher announced that it’s reviving the original Star Wars comic for one month.

As revealed by Comicbook.com, Marvel will publish Star Wars #108 in May 2019. Not only will this standalone issue pick up where the original series left off, it’ll even feature the return of classic Marvel characters like Jaxxon, Domina Tagge and Valance the Hunter.

Star Wars #108 cover by Walt Simonson. (Marvel Comics) Star Wars #108 cover by Walt Simonson. (Marvel Comics)

Continue reading…

Fire Emblem Switch Release Date Announced, Gameplay Details Revealed

During today’s Direct, Nintendo revealed that Fire Emblem: Three Houses will launch on Switch on July 26, later than the Spring release window that had previously been announced.

Nintendo also showed off a large amount of story and gameplay details for Three Houses, which puts you in the role of a teacher at a neutral officer’s academy seated in the center of three kingdoms. You pick one of three houses to teach for within the academy, each representing one of the countries surrounding it, and grow and foster your units as students before taking them out on missions in the field.

As with other Fire Emblem games, units will grow relationships with each other and can be specialized through training – Three Houses just does so in the context of a university setting as opposed to an all out war. You’ll be able to give units exams to teach them magic, learn skills like horseback riding, or to train them into specific roles.

Continue reading…

Nintendo Switch’s Fire Emblem: Three Houses Details Revealed

Although the latest Nintendo Direct was filled with big news, upcoming Switch title Fire Emblem: Three Houses was the centerpiece, with an extended trailer showing off tons of narrative details about the upcoming game. We also saw combat in action and learned more about how characters will form bonds.

In Three Houses, three ruling powers share the land in relative harmony. You–either a male or female character–are a mercenary under your father Jeralt’s command, and you receive an offer to teach at the Officer’s Academy.

The Academy is composed of the titular three houses–the Black Eagles, Blue Lions, or Golden Deer–and train them in particular skills to help you in battle. You’re in charge of building a lesson plan of sorts that will help them learn and grow. Your students can also interact and form bonds at the academy, which will influence their actions on the battlefield.

Fire Emblem: Three Houses will release for Nintendo Switch on July 26. The presentation also included a rundown of the game’s special edition. In other Nintendo Direct news, the company began the presentation with the announcement of Super Mario Maker 2 for Switch.

Square Enix Announces New RPG, Oninaki

Square Enix’s development team behind I Am Setsuna and Lost Sphear, Tokyo RPG Factory, has revealed its latest game, Oninaki, in Nintendo’s February 13 Direct.

The action-RPG is scheduled for a summer 2019 launch, and takes place in a world where, according to its trailer, people are forced to lead repressed lives, never properly being able to grieve the dead.

Players will control a protagonist who can cross between worlds, from the land of the living to a world beyond, where they’ll encounter lost souls. Players can save those lost souls, taking them on to use in combat for specific abilities. Saving them will also prevent them from becoming the very monsters players will be fighting in Oninaki.

Continue reading…

Netflix’s Umbrella Academy Is An Insane Remix Of The Comics And Here’s Why

While Netflix’s Marvel shows seem to be coming to an end–only two of the six series are left standing–that doesn’t mean the streaming service is getting out of the superhero game. In Umbrella Academy, the new original series based on comics by Gerard Way and Gabriel Bá, the street-level crime fighting has been replaced with time travel, the threat of global destruction, and some very entertaining dance sequences.

Umbrella Academy follows a highly-dysfunctional “family” of people with a variety of powers–and the one “sibling” that seemingly has nothing special about her–as they’re reunited following the death of their father-figure. That’s just the kickoff point for the series, though. Whether it’s time assassins from the future, a talking chimpanzee in a suit, or an old man stuck in the body of a teenager, Umbrella Academy is a comic book and TV series that embraces the weirdness of its premise and isn’t afraid to look silly to tell its story.

That said, comic book purists need to brace themselves. When you sit down to watch Umbrella Academy when it premieres on Netflix, you’re going to notice some big changes from the source material. The first season roughly follows the first volume of comics, otherwise known as the “Apocalypse Suite” story. As executive producer and showrunner Steve Blackman told GameSpot, though, it would have been impossible to simply let the show play out the same as the comic.

No Caption Provided

“I wanted to respect what Gerard and Gabriel had done,” he explained. “I didn’t want to not feel that the fans would look at this and say, ‘This is nothing I’ve ever seen.’ At the same time, my goal was also to broaden it out to a whole new group of people who had not read the [graphic] novel yet. So, it was sort of looking at things… finding creative things that could make you feel that you’re in a moment that you’ve seen before but then just expand on it as well as bring in sometimes new content that just had to fill [10 hours].”

To do that, not only were new elements added, but story elements and characters from other Umbrella Academy stories were given more time to shine–including Hazel (Cameron Briton) and Cha-Cha (Mary J. Blige) in one of the season’s best subplots. Beyond that, fans will get to see more development and interaction between the Hargreeves “family,” which is a dynamic at the show’s core.

If new things frighten you, Blackman doesn’t want you to worry. While there have been some alterations made while adapting the comic, the heart of the show remains the same. “I’m hoping that the graphic novel fans will feel respected, that the material was respected and that the characters, you know, even though we made changes along the way,” he says.

No Caption Provided

And it’s that respect for the comics that sold Way on collaborating with Blackman on Umbrella Academy and essentially handing the showrunner control over how they’re portrayed on TV. “It is about meeting and trusting talented people and I met Steve. I saw he had a vision, and I trusted that vision,” he explained. “I said, ‘Go for it.’ And I’ll do my thing on the book, and we’ll have this weird little symbiotic relationship where I’m generating these crazy ideas and then you’re taking them and expanding them or doing anything with them. So it’s a cool relationship.”

Based on the trailers alone, that cool relationship has created something special and unlike just about any other comic book show you’ll find on TV. Umbrella Academy premieres on Netflix on February 15.