The developers from Tango Gameworks are yet to officially announce the launch date for its next project Ghostwire: Tokyo, but according to a recent PSN listing, the title could arrive in just a few months — on March 24.
The notification with a possible launch date briefly appeared on Ghostwire: Tokyo's official page on the PlayStation Store and started spreading across the web. It was quickly removed, although we got our screenshot as seen below. It appears that the devs could announce the exact date for the game during the next big State of Play showcase, reportedly scheduled to take place in February.
Originally, Ghostwire: Tokyo was intended to arrive in late 2021, but was postponed into 2022. Considering the action-adventure title was already rated by the Korean games rating agency earlier this year, development must be approaching its final stretch for a plausible Spring release.
Of course, the recent listing on the product page isn't an official confirmation from the publisher, fans should probably wait for a bit in order for Bethesda or Sony to clarify the situation. We'll keep an eye on any related updates from the team to ensure that all the above wasn't a simple mistake.
Ghostwire: Tokyo is the next project by well-known creator Shinji Mikami, responsible for the Resident Evil and Dino Crisis series, as well as The Evil Within franchise. Ghostwire: Tokyo seems like a pretty unusual addition to his impressive portfolio, as the title uses a first-person perspective, is set in a mysterious haunted Tokyo, and nothing is as terrifying as what you expect after Sebastian Castellanos's misadventures. The upcoming game's combat system is described by the devs as "karate meets magic," with the protagonist utilizing hand movements inspired by Kuji-kiri hand gestures to cast spells and defeat evil spirits.
Ghostwire: Tokyo will launch on PC and PlayStation 5 with a bunch of special features available for players, such as DualSense haptic feedback and Tempest 3D AudioTech support. You can also expect it to run at 4K with ray tracing on console for some fancy-looking Tokyo at night.
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