![]() ![]() Journalists get yelled at for spoiling games by reporting on leaks - someone is undoubtedly upset about the Cammy video up there and is about to be upset about the Ken image below. I think there’s definitely some logic and sympathy in the idea that developers do not necessarily like it when a game isn’t revealed on their terms, but also we as an industry just take it way too far. Story details have appeared to leak out onto social media sites and, while there’s no way to verify their accuracy, at this point there is also no real reason to doubt them either.Īnd my immediate reaction to a lot of this is, how the hell can this happen? How could all of these things just ruin their marketing plan immediately after the game’s big debut? While I still think that’s a genuine question, I have come around to another internal framing of it: why not? Not only is what is presumably the entire launch roster known, but it’s accompanied by pictures showing off all their new designs. ![]() Our reporting has benefited from talkative people surrounding Capcom projects in the past, too.īut the immediacy and breadth of this Street Fighter 6 leak makes it notable. The Osaka night scene has a reputation for bartenders knowing more about Capcom projects than its marketing employees do, since all the developers leave the offices and talk about what they’re working on to anyone who will listen. Capcom 3, fans found most of the roster uploaded to the game’s website already. The day they revealed Ultimate Marvel vs. If they were a ship, they would have sunk to the bottom of the ocean, because nothing stays afloat with that many holes in it. None of this is, in a vacuum, altogether shocking. ![]()
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