Yakuza creator Toshihiro Nagoshi left SEGA three years ago to join NetEase, where he founded his own Tokyo-based studio to make global console games.
The game designer was featured in a lengthy interview with Japanese magazine Famitsu published yesterday. Nagoshi talked about various topics, but the most interesting tidbit is arguably that he believes the era where game size is the selling point will soon pass.
What I’m making now is an action adventure. After the experimental phase and the phase where the experiments are exhausted, we will move on to the phase of mass-producing assets, but I think it would be good if you thought of it as being on the eve of the mass-production phase. In that sense, it’s going well, but in many ways, it’s a bit large in scale. In addition, at first glance, the game system is complicated. But I don’t want to make it a troublesome game… Well, it’s difficult to talk about what I can’t say at this point.
Anyway, I want to make it a game that is satisfying to play, but I don’t want it to be a hassle. Even though there aren’t many completely new games out there, there are so many titles out there that you can’t play them all, including overseas. Looking at the situation, I think the volume of console games in the lives of average game fans may be a bit excessive. There are still many titles out there, but I feel that the era of games where volume is the selling point is about to pass.
The interesting thing is that he admits his next game is also going to be large in scale, which isn’t surprising given that his last game, Yakuza: Like a Dragon, required 45.5 hours just for the main quest, while a completionist…
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