In response to two new reviews, the folks at MachineGames are engaged on Wolfenstein 3, confirming what the studio itself gave the impression to be hinting at.
Today’s reports kicked off with Jez Corden at Windows Central who, in an article about Xbox’s upcoming yr, acknowledged: “…I’ve heard that Wolfenstein III can also be on the playing cards to coincide with the upcoming Wolfenstein Amazon TV present.”
The TV present is barely rumoured at this level, not confirmed, so we do not know when it’s imagined to air.
MachineGames final title was Indiana Jones and the Nice Circle, and it’s potential that the studio can also be engaged on a sequel to that. However the workforce is sufficiently big to deal with a number of tasks, as they hinted toward in their financial reports where they said, “multiple exciting new projects,” were being worked on.
Getting again to Wolfenstein, Kotaku also issued an article today in which they confirm Corden’s claims.
“…Kotaku can affirm it’s true from our personal sources” stated the location.
Wolfenstein has been inactive since 2019’s extremely disappointing Wolfenstein: Youngblood which was developed with help from Arkane Lyon. It was, frankly, bloody horrible and an enormous step down when it comes to high quality from the prior two video games, each of which have been wonderful.
MachineGames themselves have been pretty clear about their desire to return to the series, saying in a documentary that “we’re not carried out with Wolfenstein but. We now have a narrative to inform.”
Additionally they stated they at all times envisioned the collection as a trilogy, so I suppose it’s time to wreck some extra Nazis. Convey it on.
You might also like
More from Gaming Global
The Sekiro anime looks gorgeous, gory in new trailer from Crunchyroll
FromSoftware's samurai-action Soulslike Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice is being tailored into a brand new anime collection, Sekiro: No Defeat, …
Everyone's Laughing At The New Look Of DLSS 5's "Yassify Filter"
Nvidia has unveiled its new upscaling know-how, DLSS 5, which it is calling "a dramatic leap in visible realism." …





