Despite a PlayStation blog earlier this year that suggested Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater would drop in 2024, Konami has yet to put a definite release date against the highly-anticipated remake.
According to Konami’s half-yearly financial results, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is still listed as “TBD,” alongside Silent Hill f, Silent Hill Townfall, and a couple of games only released in Japan.
It’s not that the company is simply avoiding detailing the release dates of games coming in 2025, either - other titles on the list such as Yu-Gi-Oh! Early Days Collection has generic "2025" or "Feb 2025" dates appended. It’s just Snake Eater and the Silent Hill games that have no hint of a street date at all.
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Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater To Borrow Elements From Original
For players hoping for a little more information about Silent Hill 2 Remake’s financial performance, that too is sadly missing from the presentation. As of now, it’s pretty much known that it sold over a million copies in just three days.
Konami says the remake of Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater maintains what players loved from the original, such as its story, characters, voice acting, gameplay, and music, but now it is "presented in an even more immersive experience".
It’s been a year since players got a look at some in-engine footage of the remake. While Snake actor David Hayter gave the trailer his approval, others believed they missed the older style of the original game.
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Ubisoft Brings First-Ever Blockchain Game With NFTs
Ubisoft has announced the launch of its first-ever blockchain game, the tactical NFT battler Champions Tactics: Grimora Chronicles. The company announced the game last June after dabbling in blockchain but has only now quietly launched it.
The game is on PC and free to start, though players can buy figurines with which to battle using either in-game gold or cryptocurrency. These figurines are NFTs and can be bought on the game’s marketplace from anywhere between $7 to $64,000. It seems to be possible to play the game without buying figurines, though those willing to pay extortionate prices will surely have more success in battles.
Battles themselves are turn-based affairs against other players with squads of three figurines. Francois Bodson, studio director at Ubisoft Paris, told IGN the game "offers deep strategic gameplay featuring unique in-game assets and several exciting innovations", comparing it with a physical trading card game.