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Jax

Cygames’ Three Long-Awaited Games Are Still in Development

After years of near-total silence, Cygames has confirmed that three of its most anticipated projects — action RPG Project Awakening, real-time tactics game Lost Order, and fantasy action game Garnet Arena: Mages of Magicary — are all still in active development. The confirmation comes via a Weekly Famitsu interview with Cygames president Koichi Watanabe, published as part of the magazine’s 15th anniversary cover feature on the studio behind Granblue Fantasy and Granblue Fantasy: Relink.

Project Awakening Is Alive and “Starting to Take Shape”

Of the three titles, Project Awakening has the longest waiting list. The action RPG was first announced at Cygames NEXT 2016, resurfaced as a PS4 title at the PlayStation LineUp Tour in 2018, had a demo rated in 2019 that never released, and then went almost completely dark — save for appearing in parent company CyberAgent’s financial reports. That makes Watanabe’s words here genuinely welcome.

“Development [on Project Awakening] is, of course, steadily progressing,” Watanabe said, as reported by Gematsu from the Famitsu interview. “What I can say at the moment is that it is really starting to take shape. Everyone on the team is working each day with a real sense of confidence that things are coming together.”

Asked whether the 2018 trailer still reflects the game’s direction, Watanabe clarified: “If you’re asking, ‘Is it exactly the same?’, I’d say it’s a little different. The overall direction remains largely the same, but as development has progressed, we’ve continued polishing it by adding new elements here and there.” Cygames also shared new Project Awakening footage directly with Famitsu during the interview — none of which has been made public yet.

Project Awakening 2021 Cygames Tech Conference screenshot
Image courtesy of Cygames
Project Awakening Debut Trailer — via Cygames公式チャンネル on YouTube

Lost Order Enters Its Final Stretch

Lost Order — a real-time tactics smartphone game also announced at Cygames NEXT 2016 — actually had a closed beta back in 2017, raising expectations that a launch wasn’t far off. It then disappeared. Watanabe now says it’s closer than ever: “This one is also deep in development, and is now entering the final stretch.”

The rebuild has been extensive. “We’ve rebuilt everything from scratch since the closed beta test [in 2017], including the character models,” Watanabe explained. “It’s still in development, so the quality is only going to improve going forward. We are gradually beginning to see the path toward launch.” Famitsu’s editors, who were shown new footage during the interview, described the results as being of “astonishing quality” — “a bit unbelievable that this is possible as a smartphone app.”

Lost Order Cygames real-time tactics smartphone game
Image courtesy of Cygames
LOST ORDER Prologue Movie — via Cygames公式チャンネル on YouTube

Garnet Arena: Mages of Magicary Confirmed Active

The third title, Garnet Arena: Mages of Magicary, was originally announced in 2021 as “Project GAMM” before receiving its full name in 2023. The fantasy action game is produced by Kenichiro Takaki, who joined Cygames after his long tenure at Marvelous. Watanabe confirmed it remains in development and that Cygames shared new gameplay footage with Famitsu during the interview, though none has been released publicly.

Garnet Arena: Mages of Magicary title announcement key art
Image courtesy of Cygames
Garnet Arena: Mages of Magicary gameplay screenshot
Image courtesy of Cygames

A Studio Built for the Long Game

Beyond confirming the three titles, Watanabe gave a broader read on the company’s health. He said Cygames prefers not to share news on projects while they are still in a “half-finished state” — which explains the long silences. He also noted that teams are “currently firing on all cylinders,” with developers proactively chasing quality improvements on their own initiative. Completing the Cygames NEXT 2016 slate remains the company’s top priority, but Watanabe also confirmed that entirely new projects are in early preparation.

For Singapore and Southeast Asia gamers, this is significant news. Cygames built its regional fanbase through Granblue Fantasy — which still runs regular events and is widely played on mobile across SEA — and last year’s Granblue Fantasy: Relink (which recently brought its Endless Ragnarok expansion to Nintendo Switch 2). Project Awakening and Lost Order have been on the radar of this audience for nearly a decade. No release windows or platforms were announced, and no new screenshots have been released publicly yet — but at least these games are confirmed alive and apparently looking the part. We’ll be watching Famitsu and the Cygames official channels for the next update.

Sword Art Online: Echoes of Aincrad Is Out Now on PS5, Xbox and PC

Two years after it was first teased, the Sword Art Online game every SAO fan actually wanted — a proper single-player action RPG set inside Aincrad, with you as the player character — has finally arrived. Sword Art Online: Echoes of Aincrad is out now on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC via Steam, published by Bandai Namco Entertainment. Singapore PS5 and Xbox players can dive in today; the PC launch on Steam is live as well.

Echoes of Aincrad | Gameplay Trailer — via Bandai Namco Entertainment America on YouTube

Step Into the Death Game

The premise puts you in the boots of an early beta tester who, like the rest of the 10,000 players logged into the first official launch of Sword Art Online, discovers that logging out is no longer possible — and that dying in-game means dying for real. You start with a slight advantage over most players thanks to your beta access to certain quests and mechanics, but Floor 1 is still a brutal introduction. The story escalates from Floor 2 onwards as a cryptic quest hints at a catastrophe that may only be preventable under very specific conditions.

Sword Art Online Echoes of Aincrad — sword combat against a dungeon boss
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco Entertainment

Echoes of Aincrad is fully single-player — no online multiplayer — but the game replicates the feeling of a massive VRMMORPG through its AI partner system, its layered quest design, and the consistent pressure of the death game stakes. The game covers the first two complete floors of the floating castle, with an expansion DLC confirmed to add more by 31 December 2026.

Six Weapons, One Partner

Combat is built around six distinct weapon types — Sword & Shield, Two-Handed Axe, Dagger, Rapier, Two-Handed Sword, and Mace — each with a different moveset and a roster of Sword Skills (special ability attacks). Weapons can be upgraded and combined for further customisation.

Echoes of Aincrad — the floating castle Aincrad, multiple floors visible
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco Entertainment

For every quest, you bring one partner from a growing roster of characters who each play a different role: some deal damage, others heal, buff, or control crowds. You can direct their positioning and focus mid-fight, which adds a light layer of tactics to what is otherwise a fast, action-forward combat system. Pick the wrong partner for a boss and you will feel it; pick the right one and some of Aincrad’s nastier encounters click into place satisfyingly.

SAO Echoes of Aincrad — partner character supporting player in combat
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco Entertainment

Death Game Mode — For Those Who Dare

Beyond the standard story mode sits the game’s highest-stakes offering: Death Game Mode, where a single death permanently erases your save file. It is available immediately for Deluxe and Ultimate edition buyers, and unlockable after completing the story for Standard edition players. If you have ever watched the SAO anime and wondered what it would actually feel like to play under those conditions, this is as close as games have come to a genuine answer.

Echoes of Aincrad — dramatic boss battle on Aincrad's upper floors
Image courtesy of Bandai Namco Entertainment

Editions and Where to Get It

Three digital editions are available at launch. The Standard Edition (USD 69.99) covers the base game. The Deluxe Edition (USD 89.99) bundles the Expansion DLC Pass, a starter resource pack, and Death Game Mode Early Unlock. The Ultimate Edition (USD 109.99) adds an exclusive bonus anime short, a 141-track digital soundtrack, a 640-page digital artbook, and a special armour set. Pre-order purchasers — the bonus runs until today — receive the Proto-Elucidator Weapon Pack, a set of six jet-black weapons themed on Kirito’s signature blade. SGD pricing is listed directly on the PlayStation Store and Steam for Singapore players. A physical Aincrad Edition (USD 149.99) includes an artbook, soundtrack, and exclusive collectibles.

The game supports English and Japanese audio with subtitles in 14 languages, including Traditional Chinese, Indonesian, Thai, and Korean — making the Asia release a complete, localised package for the region. For more game launch news, head to our Game News section.

LEGO Pokémon 2026: Arcanine, Rayquaza and Oak’s Lab Revealed

Five brand-new LEGO Pokémon sets have been officially revealed for 2026, and the line-up runs the full spectrum — from a posable Arcanine you can manoeuvre into a growl pose, to a towering Rayquaza soaring above the Sky Pillar, and a flagship Poké Ball that opens to reveal Professor Oak’s entire lab inside. The sets were announced jointly by The Pokémon Company International and LEGO, and were first reported in detail by Siliconera.

1 August: Three Posable Pokémon Sets

The first wave lands globally on 1 August 2026 and centres on fully posable Pokémon models with articulated joints — a meaningful step up from the static display pieces that kicked off LEGO’s collaboration with The Pokémon Company.

LEGO Arcanine set 72160, 1190 pieces
Image courtesy of LEGO and The Pokémon Company

LEGO Arcanine (Set 72160 · 1,190 pieces · US$109.99 · Ages 18+) is the showstopper of the August batch. The Legendary-tier dog can open and close its mouth, rotate its head, and shift its legs into different stances, letting you display it prowling low or rearing up. At 1,190 pieces it will take a solid build session to put together — and given how intricate the fur detailing looks from the official images, that time will feel well spent.

LEGO Munchlax set 72150, 757 pieces
Image courtesy of LEGO and The Pokémon Company

LEGO Munchlax (Set 72150 · 757 pieces · US$69.99 · Ages 18+) comes with a tree stump base scattered with berries, mushrooms and flowers — exactly the spread #0446 deserves. The head and arms are articulated, and at US$69.99 it is the most accessible entry point of the three August sets.

LEGO Rayquaza (Set 72168 · 1,083 pieces · US$129.99 · Ages 18+) is the wave’s visual centrepiece. The serpentine body is fully posable and comes with a detailed Sky Pillar base plus a Zinnia minifigure — making it the first LEGO Pokémon set to include a trainer minifig alongside the Pokémon itself. The Pokémon Company’s official YouTube channel teased the 2026 LEGO Pokémon line-up earlier this year:

Get ready to electrify your imagination in 2026 📛 ⚡️ #LEGO #Pokemon #LEGOPokemon — via The Official Pokémon YouTube channel

1 October: Trainer Sets and the Oak’s Lab Poké Ball

The October wave leans hard into Pokémon Red and Blue nostalgia, focusing on the player character Red and the legendary opening of the very first Pokémon game.

LEGO Red Upscaled Minifigure set 40868, 930 pieces
Image courtesy of LEGO and The Pokémon Company

LEGO Red Upscaled Minifigure (Set 40868 · 930 pieces · US$79.99 · Ages 10+) is a giant-scale version of the classic LEGO minifig design, depicting Red in his iconic red jacket, white cap and blue jeans. Arms, legs and head are all articulated so you can pose him mid-battle, and he comes clutching a Poké Ball in one hand. The 10+ age rating makes it the most display-friendly piece for younger fans too. For those who want something smaller for their bag, there is also a US$5.99 Red minifigure keychain — the most affordable way to carry the original Pokémon trainer around.

LEGO Iconic Trainer Moments Poke Ball set 72154 closed
Image courtesy of LEGO and The Pokémon Company

LEGO Iconic Trainer Moments Poké Ball (Set 72154 · 2,386 pieces · US$299.99 · Ages 18+) is the crown jewel. Closed, it looks exactly like an oversized Poké Ball sitting in a ring of grass. Open it and the upper half reveals a complete miniature Professor Oak’s lab: workbench, bookshelves, three Poké Balls lined up on the table, the whole scene. The lower half unfolds into an outdoor battle: Red faces a Picknicker with Pikachu and Eevee in play. Four minifigures — Red, Professor Oak, the Picknicker, and their Pokémon — are all included, making it the most story-rich set in the entire 2026 LEGO Pokémon range.

LEGO Iconic Trainer Moments Poke Ball open showing Oak's Lab inside
Image courtesy of LEGO and The Pokémon Company

Singapore Availability and Pricing

All five sets are confirmed for global release on those dates. Singapore fans should be able to order through the LEGO Singapore website or from LEGO stores and major toy retailers here. Pricing above is in US dollars; SGD pricing has not yet been announced, so expect local prices to reflect the current exchange rate once listings go live. These sets join an existing LEGO Pokémon range that already includes Pikachu, Eevee, Charizard and Mewtwo — if you have been holding off, the August 1 release is the moment to finally plan that shelf. For more Pokémon collecting coverage, check out our shop and merchandise posts.

7 Sports Anime on Crunchyroll for World Cup Fans

The FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-finals start tomorrow — and whether you’re a Samurai Blue loyalist, a casual neutral riding the bracket drama, or someone who just can’t stop refreshing the highlights, Crunchyroll’s sports anime library is the perfect company between whistles. Some of these series feel more relevant right now than ever before.

Blue Lock — The One Every Football Fan Needs to See Right Now

Japan made it through the Round of 32 in 2026, and with every advance, the phrase “Blue Lock is real” has been trending all over Singapore social feeds. The show’s premise — 300 high school strikers locked in a cutthroat tournament to forge Japan’s best World Cup scorer — is almost uncomfortably prophetic of the tournament’s knockout intensity. Season 3 launched in 2026, so if you’ve been meaning to start, there’s now a frankly irresponsible amount to binge before the semis.

Watch Blue Lock on Crunchyroll

BLUE LOCK | Official Trailer — via Crunchyroll on YouTube

Haikyu!! — The Gold Standard You’ll Thank Yourself For Starting

Haikyu!! anime key visual on Crunchyroll
Image courtesy of Crunchyroll

The World Cup knockout stage turns every match into an all-or-nothing situation — and Haikyu!! lives in exactly that space. Shoyo Hinata is too short and too green, his rival Tobio Kageyama is too arrogant to be a real teammate, and their high school volleyball team has no business competing with the best in Japan. It’s a deeply familiar sporting underdog formula, executed at the highest possible level. Crunchyroll has the complete series run plus the final film The Dumpster Battle.

Watch Haikyu!! on Crunchyroll

More Sports Anime Worth Your Queue

Shoot! Goal to the Future

A football anime that approaches the game from the coaching side. Former champion Atsushi Kamiya returns to guide a struggling team and reignite a player who has completely checked out. If Blue Lock is the ego-maximisation approach to football, Shoot! is about rediscovering the joy of it. Good for the post-match wind-down. Watch on Crunchyroll.

Kuroko’s Basketball

Kuroko's Basketball anime on Crunchyroll
Image courtesy of Crunchyroll

Basketball, not football — but the knockout tension maps directly onto the World Cup bracket. Tetsuya Kuroko is so unremarkable that opponents literally forget he’s on the pitch, turning his invisibility into the deadliest assist weapon in the game. The Generation of Miracles rivals each carry a different kind of overwhelm, and the tournament arc pacing is exactly what you want during the round of eight. Watch on Crunchyroll.

Eyeshield 21

Eyeshield 21 anime on Crunchyroll
Image courtesy of Crunchyroll

The 2026 World Cup is co-hosted across the USA, Canada, and Mexico, which gives Eyeshield 21’s American football premise a slightly fitting energy right now. Sena Kobayakawa has spent his whole life running errands for bullies — which made him, without realising it, the fastest schoolboy in Japan. The Deimon Devil Bats’ scrappy, improvised path through competition is among the most entertaining underdog narratives in the genre. Watch on Crunchyroll.

Yuri!!! on ICE

Yuri on Ice anime on Crunchyroll
Image courtesy of Crunchyroll

Different sport, same emotional architecture. Yuri Katsuki crashed out of the Grand Prix Final and was ready to retire entirely — then his idol Victor Nikiforov showed up as his coach. If the World Cup pressure games are triggering your performance anxiety by proxy, Yuri’s comeback from utter humiliation to the world stage is one of the most cathartic sporting arcs you’ll find on the platform. Watch on Crunchyroll.

MF GHOST

No ball, no pitch — just petrol and asphalt. MF Ghost, the spiritual sequel to Initial D by the same creator, follows driver Kanata Rivington competing on the MFG circuit across Japanese motorways after most gas engines have been outlawed. It’s competitive sport at 300 km/h, and it scratches exactly the same speed-of-decision-making itch that makes the World Cup’s high-pressure moments so watchable. Watch on Crunchyroll.

All seven series are streaming on Crunchyroll in Singapore. For more anime coverage including seasonal picks and streaming guides, check the rest of our anime section.

Code Geass: Rozé of the Recapture Premieres on Disney+ Singapore This Friday

It’s been nearly two decades since the last Code Geass TV series aired. That changes this Friday. Code Geass: Rozé of the Recapture begins its 12-episode television run on 10 July 2026 on MBS and TBS in Japan — and Disney+ Singapore is streaming it simultaneously, so local fans don’t have to wait a single episode.

Code Geass: Rozé of the Recapture key visual
Image courtesy of Sunrise

What Is Rozé of the Recapture?

Rozé of the Recapture was originally released as a four-part theatrical series, now re-edited and expanded into a 12-episode television cut — making it the first new Code Geass TV broadcast since Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 finished its run in 2008. The story is set in an alternate timeline and centres on a pair of siblings, Ash and Rozé, taking on a new conflict in the Code Geass universe. It’s a fresh entry point as much as a continuation, so you don’t need to have followed every Code Geass side story to follow along.

The returning creative team is part of what makes this worth attention. Director Yoshimitsu Ohara helmed the original Lelouch series. Iconic design group CLAMP is back for character design originals. Hitomi Kuroishi returns for the music. Studio Sunrise produced it. This is the same core team that built the original, not a handoff to different hands.

Code Geass: Rozé of the Recapture | Official Trailer | Disney+ Singapore — via Disney+ Singapore on YouTube

How to Watch in Singapore

Disney+ Singapore is the home for Rozé of the Recapture locally. The simulcast starts with the 10 July broadcast premiere — new episodes will follow the Japanese TV schedule weekly. If you’re already subscribed to Disney+, no additional purchase is needed. Just search for Code Geass in the app on Friday.

For fans who want to catch up on the franchise before Friday, the original Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion series is also available on streaming platforms, though that’s a much bigger commitment at 50 episodes across two seasons.

Code Geass Rozé TV broadcast schedule
Image courtesy of Sunrise

What’s Coming After: Hoshi Oi no Aspar

Rozé isn’t the end of the road for Code Geass. A brand-new series titled Code Geass: Hoshi Oi no Aspar (Star-Chasing Aspar) was announced in December 2025, with director Kazuya Nomura and writer Mado Nozaki attached. No release date has been confirmed, but the project is in development — the franchise is clearly in active expansion mode. If Rozé lands well, expect momentum to build behind it.

Meanwhile, a Code Geass 20th Anniversary Exhibition is scheduled for Tokyo in September 2026, followed by Osaka in November 2026 — expect merchandise and event tie-ins to ramp up as the anniversary window approaches.

Code Geass Rozé illustration card artwork
Image courtesy of Sunrise

Singapore’s Code Geass Connection

Code Geass aired in Singapore in the late 2000s and left a lasting mark on a generation of local anime fans who are now in their late 20s and 30s. The blend of mecha action, political strategy, and theatrical character writing was something that didn’t come around often, and Lelouch’s iconic ‘I command you’ became shorthand for the franchise across Singapore’s anime community. Rozé gives those fans a chance to return to that world — and a simultaneous Disney+ stream means there’s no excuse to wait.

Disney+ drops Rozé of the Recapture on 10 July 2026. Check out more anime premieres and streaming news at Manga Anime.

Pokémon Sleep 3rd Anniversary: Sinnoh Starters Arrive on 13 July

Three years in, and Pokémon Sleep is still finding new ways to keep you glued to the app. This time, it’s big: the Sinnoh first-partner Pokémon — Turtwig, Chimchar, and Piplup — are arriving in Pokémon Sleep for the very first time, kicking off the Third Anniversary Fest on 13 July 2026. If you’ve been holding out for a Piplup, your wait is almost over.

[Official] Pokémon Sleep is nearing its third anniversary! Turtwig, Chimchar, and Piplup arrive! — via Pokémon Asia ENG on YouTube

Third Anniversary Prelude: Running Now Until 13 July

Before the main event, the Third Anniversary Prelude is already live and runs until 13 July. This warm-up phase brings increased spawn rates for the Hoenn first-partner Pokémon — Treecko, Torchic, Mudkip, and all their evolutions — alongside boosted Dream Shards and Research EXP from sleep sessions. It’s a good window to stock up resources before the bigger celebration kicks in.

Pokémon Sleep Third Anniversary Fest event visual
Image courtesy of The Pokémon Company

Pokémon Sleep 3rd Anniversary Fest Week 1 — 13 to 19 July

The headline is straightforward: Turtwig, Chimchar, and Piplup appear in Pokémon Sleep for the first time ever during Week 1, with greater encounter rates across all areas. Alongside the Sinnoh starter debuts, Week 1 rolls out a solid set of helper-focused bonuses:

  • Main skill trigger chance ×1.5 for all helper Pokémon
  • Helper Pokémon Sleep EXP ×1.5
  • Candy from sleep research ×1.5 (once per day)
  • A limited-time Dream Gift from Snorlax each day

Limited-time missions also go live during Week 1, rewarding Pokémon Incense for all three Sinnoh starters. If Turtwig or Chimchar aren’t spawning in your current research area, the incense is your best route to guaranteed encounters.

Pokémon Sleep anniversary event bonuses
Image courtesy of The Pokémon Company

Pokémon Sleep 3rd Anniversary Fest Week 2 — 20 to 26 July

Week 2 expands the Sinnoh roster significantly: the full evolution lines join the game, so Grotle, Torterra, Monferno, Infernape, Prinplup, and Empoleon all appear with greater rates. It’s the week to build out your Sinnoh team beyond the base forms. The bonuses shift to powering up your helpers:

  • Dish Final Strength ×1.5 (up to ×3 for Extra Tasty dishes, and ×4.5 on Extra Tasty dishes on Sundays)
  • Limited-time Mini Candy Boost and Festive Flowers
  • Neutralising Mints, plus a new feature that will stay available permanently after the event ends

On 20 July — the actual third anniversary of Pokémon Sleep’s global launch — the developers are sending a special gift to every player as a thank-you for three years of sleeping together with Snorlax.

Pokémon Sleep Sinnoh starters event artwork
Image courtesy of The Pokémon Company

Generation IV Finally Comes to Pokémon Sleep

The arrival of the Sinnoh starters is a milestone for collectors who have been waiting since the game launched in July 2023. Pokémon Diamond and Pearl remain beloved games for Singapore’s 20-something and 30-something Pokémon fans — a generation that grew up with the Sinnoh region — and Turtwig in particular has been a long-requested favourite. The Pokémon Asia ENG official channel has been hyping the anniversary directly at its Southeast Asian audience, which tells you where a big chunk of the app’s engagement is coming from.

The Third Anniversary Fest runs from 13 to 27 July 2026 in two weeks of distinct bonuses, with the Sinnoh starter evolutions unlocking fully in Week 2. Check the Pokémon Sleep official site for any schedule updates, and catch up on more Pokémon and Nintendo news at Game News.

Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok Launches on Switch 2 Today

Cygames’ acclaimed action RPG just got a major expansion, and it is live today. Granblue Fantasy: Relink — Endless Ragnarok launches on Nintendo Switch 2, PS4, PS5, and PC via Steam, bringing a new story arc, reworked endgame systems, and a fresh reason to pick up one of the best co-op action RPGs of recent years.

Combat action in Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok
Image courtesy of Cygames

What Is Endless Ragnarok?

Granblue Fantasy: Relink launched on PS4/PS5 and Steam in 2024 and quickly became a favourite for its fluid character action and surprisingly robust 4-player co-op mode. Endless Ragnarok is not a minor DLC update — it is a substantial expansion that adds:

  • A new story chapter pitting your crew against mysterious, world-threatening beings called ragnalia
  • A reworked Summon system that gives you direct control over summoned primal beasts, culminating in powerful Primal Burst chain attacks
  • The Conflux, a new solo challenge mode where unpredictable obstacles and enigmatic powers keep each run feeling different
  • New co-op quest tiers and bosses to grind through with friends
  • Master Traits, an expanded progression layer that unlocks new character-specific abilities beyond the base skill trees
Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok | Launch Trailer “Not Forgotten Sky” — via Granblue Fantasy: Relink Official Channel on YouTube

Switch 2 Version: What’s New

This is the game’s Nintendo Switch 2 debut. For Switch 2 owners, the package includes the full base game (Granblue Fantasy: Relink) plus the Endless Ragnarok content in one bundle — no separate purchase needed. The Switch 2 edition also adds local wireless co-op for up to four players, a mode that is exclusive to the Nintendo platform. Online cross-play is supported across all versions (PS4, PS5, Switch 2, Steam), so your party size is not limited by which platform your friends own.

Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok new character in a dramatic outdoor environment
Image courtesy of Cygames

Pricing and How to Get It

On Switch 2, PS5, and Steam, two purchase options are available:

  • New to Relink: The full bundle (base game + Endless Ragnarok) is USD 59.99 — one purchase gets you everything. Check the Nintendo Singapore eShop listing for local SGD pricing.
  • Existing Relink owners: The Endless Ragnarok upgrade is available separately at USD 29.99 on Steam (and equivalent on PlayStation Store). If you already own Relink on PS5 or Steam, you do not have to re-buy the full game.

An early-purchase bonus runs until 31 August 2026 and includes a Supplementary Damage V Sigil and War Elemental Sigil Set — pick it up sooner rather than later if you are planning to dive into endgame content.

Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok gameplay showing new environments
Image courtesy of Cygames

Should Singapore Switch 2 Owners Pick This Up?

If you missed Granblue Fantasy: Relink on PS5 or PC, the Switch 2 bundle is a genuinely strong deal — the base game alone holds up exceptionally well, and Endless Ragnarok adds substantial new content on top. The addition of Switch 2-exclusive local co-op is a real bonus for Singapore players who prefer to game together in the same room. Cross-play means your regular online crew on PlayStation or Steam can still join your session without switching platforms.

Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok four-player co-op action
Image courtesy of Cygames

It is out now on the Nintendo eShop Singapore, PlayStation Store, and Steam. Browse more Switch 2 coverage and game news in our Game News section.

Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Switch 2 Edition Launches 30 July — Mercenary Battles Mode and Full 4K Upgrade Confirmed

Nintendo’s beloved JRPG Xenoblade Chronicles 2 is making the leap to Nintendo Switch 2 with an enhanced definitive edition launching on 30 July 2026 — just three weeks away. Whether you missed it the first time around or want to revisit Alrest in full 4K glory, this looks like the definitive way to experience Rex and Pyra’s epic adventure.

What’s New in the Switch 2 Edition

Beyond the expected resolution and performance upgrades that come with Switch 2’s beefed-up hardware, Nintendo has confirmed a brand-new Mercenary Battles mode exclusive to the Switch 2 Edition. This mode lets players pit their Blades against special challenge enemies outside the main story, with the reveal screenshots showing a white-haired Blade facing off against a Lv33 Little Bunnit — suggesting a roguelike or wave-based challenge format aimed at longtime fans who’ve already completed the main campaign.

Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Switch 2 Edition – New Mercenary Battle mode gameplay
The new Mercenary Battles mode pits your Blades against challenge enemies in standalone encounters. (Image: Nintendo)

The main game’s combat system — already one of the most layered in any JRPG — carries over intact, with Rex, Nia, and Tora’s party synergies as satisfying as ever. The Switch 2 Edition’s visual overhaul makes the game’s sweeping Titan landscapes and intricate character designs look sharper than they ever did on original Switch hardware.

Rex with Poppi in Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Switch 2 Edition
Rex and the artificial Blade Poppi shine in the enhanced visuals. (Image: Nintendo)

Full Story, Torna DLC Included

The Switch 2 Edition bundles in the complete base game alongside the critically acclaimed Torna ~ The Golden Country expansion — no separate purchase needed. That’s well over 100 hours of content for players diving in fresh. Expect the same sweeping narrative that made XBC2 a word-of-mouth JRPG hit in late 2017, now with significantly improved load times courtesy of the Switch 2’s upgraded storage architecture.

Battle scene in Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Switch 2 Edition with Rex, Nia and Tora
Party combat with Rex, Nia, and Tora remains the heart of the experience. (Image: Nintendo)

Pricing — SGD TBC

Nintendo has confirmed the US price at US$69.99 for a new physical or digital purchase, with a US$9.99 upgrade path available for existing Switch owners who already own the original game digitally. Singapore pricing has not yet been officially announced — we’ll update this article the moment Nintendo Singapore confirms local retail pricing. Based on Switch 2 launch titles, expect somewhere in the S$90–S$110 range for a new copy, though the upgrade should be considerably cheaper.

If you’re planning to grab it at launch, it’s worth registering your interest with local retailers now — Qisahn, GameXtreme, and Funan Nintendo are the usual suspects for pre-order allocations on Nintendo titles in Singapore.

Pyra and Rex emotional cutscene in Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Switch 2 Edition
The emotional story beats hit even harder at higher resolution. (Image: Nintendo)

Worth It for New Players?

Absolutely. Xenoblade Chronicles 2 was one of the standout JRPGs of the Switch’s first generation, and the Switch 2 Edition removes the main barrier — the occasionally rough original performance — that held some players back. The Mercenary Battles addition gives returning fans a reason to come back too. If you’ve been sleeping on this one, 30 July is the time to fix that.

We’ll have more coverage as the launch approaches, including a full local price confirmation and day-one impressions.

Ghibli Park’s First Original Short Film Opens Tomorrow

Studio Ghibli opens a new chapter — literally. From tomorrow, July 8, 2026, visitors to Ghibli Park in Aichi Prefecture, Japan can watch Night in the Valley of Witches (魔女の谷の夜), the first original animated short film that Studio Ghibli has ever created specifically for the park. It is a park exclusive: there is no streaming release, no theatrical run outside the park, and no plans for a wider rollout. If you want to see it, you need to be there.

What We Know About Night in the Valley of Witches

The film is co-directed by Goro Miyazaki and Akihiko Yamashita — two names that carry serious Ghibli pedigree. Goro Miyazaki (son of Hayao Miyazaki) previously directed Tales from Earthsea and From Up on Poppy Hill, and co-directed Earwig and the Witch. Akihiko Yamashita served as animation director on Spirited Away, Howl’s Moving Castle, and Ponyo, making this a reunion of deep Ghibli craft at both the directorial and animation level. The copyright credit reads: © 2026 Goro Miyazaki, Akihiko Yamashita/Studio Ghibli.

The story is set within the Valley of Witches (魔女の谷) area of Ghibli Park itself — a European storybook town inspired by the magical settings of Ghibli’s witch-themed films — bringing the physical park and the new animation into a single, intertwined experience. Further plot details have not been released, which is very much in the Ghibli tradition of minimal pre-release disclosure.

The Valley of Witches area at Ghibli Park, Nagakute City, Aichi
Image courtesy of Studio Ghibli / Ghibli Park

Where to Watch It and What Tickets You Need

The film screens at Cinema Orion, inside Ghibli’s Grand Warehouse (ジブリの大倉庫) — one of the five areas that make up Ghibli Park. To watch it, you need Ghibli Park admission that includes Grand Warehouse access. All Ghibli Park tickets require advance reservation; there are no same-day walk-in passes. Tickets for July 2026 screenings opened on May 10, 2026 via the official Ghibli Park website.

The premiere event on July 8 was a special, limited affair — just 150 tickets were made available, with a director stage greeting from Goro Miyazaki and Akihiko Yamashita. Regular screenings from July 8 onward continue as part of normal Grand Warehouse admission, no special ticket required beyond the Grand Warehouse entry.

The witch broom carousel in the Valley of Witches area at Ghibli Park
Image courtesy of Studio Ghibli / Ghibli Park

The Singapore Angle: Worth Planning a Japan Trip Around

Ghibli Park has already become one of the most-searched Japan travel destinations for Singapore visitors since it opened in 2022. A park-exclusive short that cannot be seen anywhere else in the world — and that comes from the same studio as Spirited Away, My Neighbour Totoro, and Princess Mononoke — is exactly the kind of thing that makes a Japan trip feel unmissable rather than optional.

Practically: Ghibli Park is in Nagakute City, Aichi Prefecture, about 20 minutes by subway from Nagoya station. From Singapore, Nagoya is not directly served with regular Singapore Airlines routes, but it is easily reached by connecting through Tokyo or Osaka — and if you are already planning a trip to central Japan, Nagoya is an easy addition. From Tokyo, the Shinkansen Nozomi takes about 1 hour 40 minutes. From Kyoto or Osaka, it is under an hour.

The key caveat for Singapore visitors planning ahead: all Ghibli Park tickets require advance online reservation and can sell out weeks in advance. Check the official Ghibli Park English-language site for booking windows, which open monthly. For more Japan culture and travel content, browse our Japan travel picks.