Game News Dragon Age 4 is on “very good progress”, but one of the requests of the fans will not be answered
Launched more than twelve years ago, the Dragon Age license tirelessly waits for a fourth installment to allow it to thrive once more and once more. On the side of Electronic Arts, everything is in place to give life to a new opus, but the development teams take their time and communicate little. However, we are entering a period of the year where tongues loosen when discussing upcoming projects.
Summary
- No news, good news
- A legendary edition like Mass Effect?
No news, good news
Since the release of Dragon Age Inquisitionthe third installment in the franchise, players around the world are yearning to explore a new world of heroic fantasy, but the release is long overdue. However, if we have only had the right to a series of information in dribs and drabs so farmainly through d’artworks and others concept arts, it might be that the year 2022 gives a boost to the communication campaign around the next part.
Once once more, it’s Jeff GrubbVentureBeat journalist and highly reputed insider in the industry because of his many scoops, which brings us reassuring news regarding the BioWare title. If he repeats his previous words in which he stated that the game would be released in 2023, he also took the opportunity to back up his comments with new details. According to him, the development teams largely meet the deadlines they have set themselves. He even allows himself to outbid on the subject during his last GrubbSnax show on Giant Bomb:
(About Dragon Age 4) I heard it’s in great shape (…) and the game is on schedule (…) It’s still at least 18 months from today, so not early 2023, maybe late 2023.
A legendary edition like Mass Effect?
Last May, Electronic Arts has delighted players by developing a compilation of the three remastered parts of the saga Mass Effect. As a result, many fans of the Dragon Age license pray that the three previous opuses receive the same preferential treatment, but it seems that it is not so simple. Worse still, according to Jeff Grubb, no remastering project would be in the pipes on the side of Electronic Arts and BioWare.
The journalist explains this very sad news by indicating that the three installments of Dragon Age do not share the same level of connection that the opuses of Mass Effect might have between them. What’s more, each of the games benefited from a different engine which would generate a mountain of work for the development teams. To console themselves, players can unfortunately only rely on the versions available on older generations. But let them be reassured: Dragon Age 4 coming, slowly but surely!
By JinxebWriting jeuxvideo.com
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