Exclusive PS4 supposedly canceled
The untitled God of War sequel (informally described as God of War: Ragnarök) is an action-adventure game currently in development by Santa Monica Studio and will certainly be released by Sony Interactive Home Entertainment. It is arranged to be launched in 2022 for the PlayStation 4 as well as PlayStation 5. It will be the nine installment in the God of Battle collection, the ninth chronologically, as well as the sequel to 2018's God of Battle. Loosely based on Norse mythology, the game will certainly be established in old Norway and also feature collection protagonists Kratos and also his young child Atreus. The game is expected to initiate Ragnarök, a series of events that bring about completion of days as well as portrays the fatalities of the Norse gods, which was forewarned to happen in the previous game after Kratos eliminated the Æsir god Baldur.
In the months following the game's statement in September 2020, many video gaming reporters and also sites regarded the untitled sequel as one of their a lot of anticipated video games; the game won awards for Most Desired Game as well as The Majority Of Awaited Game from the 2020 Golden Joystick Honors and PlayStation.Blog honors, respectively. Originally slated for a 2021 launch, the game was delayed due to the impact of COVID-19 on development.
According to reports, PlayStation has canceled an exclusive PS4. With the life cycle of the PS4 coming to an end, it is scheduled to get some exclusive games more like Horizon Forbidden West and God of War Ragnarok, but soon Sony's first and second part production will focus exclusively on PS5. That said, a game that PS4 users should not expect to see is never the exclusive PS4 that was missing a long time ago. Salvage, by Michael Ancel, the creator of both rayman and beyond good and evil. Seven years have passed since Wild was first announced for PS4 and, as a result, many have ruled out as vaporware or have been completely forgotten. It is enough to say that it should not be surprised that, according to the industry expert, Jeff Grubb, it has been canned.
The chronology of Salvage begins in 2014, when Wild Sheep Studios, with Michael Ancel at the head, announced the game of action and adventure of the open world with survival elements as the exclusive of PS4. To this day, it is not clear what Sony's participation was with the game, but it seems that it was a second-part relationship, which suggests that, at least, Sony was providing resources for the development of the game.
A year later, the second trailer of the game was launched. And that was the last time we saw the game, which had a great stir around him. 2016, 2017 and 2018 were years of full silence, less an update in 2017 of the annce mentioned above with new screenshots. It was not until 2019 that the game resurfaced after Sony presented a registered trademark for the title. This caused a Wild Sheep Studios update, which confirmed that it was still running in the game. What followed this was more silence until April 2020, when the game emerged again, this time because a new conceptual art was uploaded for the game to the Wild Sheep Studios website.
Since then, we have not seen or heard anything about the game, until this week, when Grubb, through giant bomb, transmitted the news that the project has been canceled. Unfortunately, Grubb does not combine this with information about why it was canceled.
As you know, Michael Ancel announced the removal of the industry in 2020, so there is a possibility that the departure of him quite suddenly contributes to the cancellation of the game.
That said all this, for now, none of this has been confirmed. Officially, the game is still under development until PlayStation or Wild Sheep Studios confirm that it is not. At the time of publication, neither party has commented on this report. If this changes, we will make sure to update the story accordingly. Meanwhile, take everything here with a grain of salt. Although Grubb has proven to be reliable in the past, he has also been out of place in the past.
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