All posts by kindaixin
kindaixin

Jax is an avid gamer since young. Starting from SUper Mario on NES, he discover his passion for the world of video gaming. Currently a PS3 and Xbox 360 gamer, Jax is actively looking for the 'next better game'. Jax is also the chief editor for GameTrader.SG blog.

‘The Violinist’: Singapore’s First Real Oscar Hope?

Singapore just made animation history. The Violinist, a hand-drawn feature more than a decade in the making, has won the Cristal for Best Feature Film — the top honour — at the 2026 Annecy International Animation Film Festival, the most prestigious event on the animation calendar. It is the first Singaporean feature ever to compete at Annecy, and it walked away as the biggest winner of them all.

The Violinist teaser — via CartoonBrew on YouTube

What is The Violinist?

The Violinist is a sweeping, hand-drawn period drama that traces the intertwined history of Singapore and Malaya from 1929 to the present day. At its heart are two childhood friends and gifted violinists, Fei and Kai, whose lives are torn apart by World War II and the Japanese Occupation — one drawn into the Resistance in Malaya, the other left to survive in occupied Singapore. Across the decades that follow, the story follows a musician’s search for a lost friend, and a shared dream of one day performing a two-violin sonata together.

It is a proudly local story told at a scale Singapore animation has never attempted before. The film is produced by home-grown studio Robot Playground Media, in co-production with Spain’s TV ON Producciones and Italy’s Altri Occhi, with France tv distribution handling worldwide sales.

Fei and Kai playing violin together on a lantern-lit street in The Violinist

Image courtesy of Robot Playground Media

A decade in the making — from an SG50 short

The Violinist didn’t appear out of nowhere. It grew out of “The Violin” (小提琴), an award-winning animated short Robot Playground Media made in 2015 for the Singapore Memory Project, marking the nation’s 50th birthday. That small, personal film about music and wartime resilience struck a chord, and over the following decade it was reworked and expanded into a full feature — Singapore’s first animated feature in close to 15 years.

Directing duties are shared between two very different talents. Ervin Han, co-founder of Robot Playground Media, is a veteran of Singapore’s animation scene making his feature directorial debut. His co-director is Raúl García, a Spanish animation veteran who spent years in Disney’s animation department on classics including Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King and Hercules — a lecturing stint at Singapore’s LaSalle College of the Arts first brought him to the city and to this project.

A young violinist practises indoors in a scene from The Violinist

Image courtesy of Robot Playground Media

Two trophies at Annecy, including the music prize

The Violinist didn’t just take the Cristal. It also picked up the SACEM Award for Best Original Soundtrack — a fitting double for a film built around music. The score is the work of Golden Horse Award-winning Singaporean composer Ricky Ho, in collaboration with Spanish composer Isabel Latorre, while the lead violin performances heard on the soundtrack were played by acclaimed Singaporean violinist Joy Yong.

Winning two awards on debut, in competition, at Annecy is a genuine landmark for the region. Speaking after the win, director Ervin Han said the recognition was “beyond anything we imagined” when the journey began. In an interview with Variety, Han framed the achievement as bigger than one country, noting the film “isn’t simply representing Singapore, it’s representing Southeast Asia” — a part of the world that, in his words, has “historically had fewer opportunities to tell its own stories” at this scale.

The Violinist team accepting the Cristal award on stage at Annecy 2026

Photo courtesy of Robot Playground Media

Could this be Singapore’s first true Oscar contender?

Here’s the part that has film watchers excited: Singapore has never received an Academy Award nomination in any category, ever. An Annecy Cristal is exactly the kind of pedigree that turns a small national film into an awards-season talking point, and The Violinist is now being openly discussed as the country’s best shot at Best Animated Feature in years.

There’s a catch, though. To qualify for the Oscars, a film generally needs a qualifying theatrical run — and as of its Annecy win, The Violinist did not yet have a US distributor or a US release date locked in. A high-profile Cristal win helps enormously on that front, but the road to the 2027 ceremony runs straight through the crowded field of big-studio animation. Nothing is guaranteed. Still, for a hand-drawn Southeast Asian story with no franchise behind it, simply being in the conversation is remarkable.

When can you watch it in Singapore?

The Violinist had its world premiere at Annecy, which ran from 21 to 27 June 2026, ahead of a planned international theatrical rollout. A Singapore cinema release is reported to be slated for September 2026 — so local audiences shouldn’t have long to wait to see it on the big screen. No confirmed streaming details have been announced yet, so for now this is one to catch in theatres.

Executive producer Justin Deimen called the film “a proud global co-production” — and that’s exactly what makes this such a milestone. A story rooted in Singapore’s own wartime memory, made by a Singapore studio, has just been crowned the best animated feature in the world. Whatever happens at the Oscars, that’s already history.

For more animation and anime coverage, check out our Manga & Anime section, and keep an eye on Annecy’s official page for the film as its release rolls out.

Delicious in Dungeon Season 2 Confirmed for October 2027 on Netflix

It’s happening, Dungeon Meshi fans — the gang is heading back underground. Studio TRIGGER officially announced Delicious in Dungeon Season 2 at Anime Expo 2026 on July 4 (July 5, 5am SGT), confirming an October 2027 premiere exclusively on Netflix. After Season 1 swept through the anime community like Laios discovering a new monster to cook, the follow-up has been one of the most anticipated continuations in recent memory.

Marcille enjoying dungeon cuisine in Delicious in Dungeon Season 1
Season 1 set the bar impossibly high for both world-building and food photography.

The official teaser trailer dropped alongside the announcement, giving us our first look at what’s to come as the story continues from Chapter 53 — the Falin chimera arc, where the dungeon’s darkest chapter truly begins. If you haven’t watched Season 1 yet, no spoilers here, but let’s just say the stakes get very real.

Same Core Team, Epic New Chapter

The core production team returns, ensuring the show’s stunning visual identity is intact. Yoshihiro Miyajima returns as series director, Kimiko Ueno continues as series composer, and Naoki Takeda reprises the character design role. The music baton passes to legendary composer Yasunori Mitsuda — yes, the man behind Chrono Trigger and Xenogears — which is an absolutely massive get for the soundtrack department.

Delicious in Dungeon Season 2 promotional artwork
Season 2 promo art teasing the darker tone ahead. Falin’s chimera transformation looms large.

The opening and ending themes have also been revealed via the official Japanese site, though English confirmation is still pending. sumika — the beloved J-pop group known for Shigatsu wa Kimi no Uso’s soundtrack contributions — performs the opening theme 運命 (Fate). Legal Lily handles the ending with キラキラの灰 (Glittering Ash). Both picks feel tonally spot-on for what Season 2’s narrative demands.

Why This Season Matters

Ryoko Kui’s manga ran 14 volumes and sold over 14 million copies worldwide. Season 1 adapted the first half beautifully — the world-building, the food, the surprisingly deep lore about the dungeon’s ecosystem. Season 2 dives into the payoff of everything that was carefully set up. The chimera storyline is where the series shows its emotional teeth, and with Mitsuda scoring it, expect to feel things.

For Singapore fans, Netflix carries Delicious in Dungeon regionally, so Season 2 will be right there in your queue when October 2027 rolls around. No hunting for streams or waiting on regional delays.

KADOKAWA Anime’s radio show tied to the series also resumes on July 5 at 21:00 JST on the KADOKAWA Anime YouTube channel, so there’s more content incoming almost immediately.

Two thousand-plus years of dungeon lore, one incredibly good anime adaptation, and now a confirmed second season with a legendary composer on board. October 2027 can’t come soon enough.

Dengeki Daisy Anime Reveals Cast at Anime Expo 2026 — Crunchyroll Pickup Confirmed

Fifteen years after its final chapter, Dengeki Daisy is finally getting its anime adaptation — and Anime Expo 2026 just gave us the first look at the full cast, a teaser PV, and confirmation that Crunchyroll will stream it worldwide. If you grew up reading Kyousuke Motomi’s hacker-romance shojo series in Betsucomi, this one’s for you.

A Fan Favourite That Waited Long Enough

Dengeki Daisy ran in Shogakukan’s Betsucomi from 2007 to 2013, spanning 16 volumes. The story follows Teru Kurebayashi, an orphaned high school student who carries a phone given to her by her late brother. It receives messages from a mysterious contact called DAISY — warm, supportive, and always watching over her. The catch: the gruff, frequently-aggravating school janitor Tasuku Kurosaki is keeping a very big secret about who DAISY really is. The manga was a hit for its mix of sweet romance, cyber-thriller tension, and a lead couple who actually talked to each other rather than misunderstanding their way to a resolution.

Cast Revealed — Yoshino Aoyama and Taku Yashiro Lead

The teaser PV unveiled at AX confirms the two main voice actors. Yoshino Aoyama — known to Singapore fans from roles in Kaguya-sama: Love is War — plays Teru Kurebayashi. Opposite her is Taku Yashiro as Tasuku Kurosaki. The teaser focuses on close-up character animation that emphasises the emotional expressiveness the source material is known for.

Tasuku Kurosaki from the Dengeki Daisy anime official teaser
Image courtesy of Aniplex / Studio DEEN
Dengeki Daisy | Official Teaser — via Crunchyroll on YouTube

Studio DEEN, and Masaru Yokoyama on Music

The production is helmed by director Sōta Ueno at Studio DEEN, the veteran studio behind adaptations of Rurouni Kenshin and Fruits Basket (the original 2001 run). Series composition is handled by Sawako Hirabayashi, with Ayaka Murakami as character designer. The most exciting staff credit for music fans: Masaru Yokoyama is composing the score. Yokoyama is the name behind Violet Evergarden, Your Lie in April, and Classroom of the Elite — soundtracks that hit hard emotionally. That pedigree is a very good fit for this story.

Teru Kurebayashi in her school uniform from the Dengeki Daisy anime teaser
Image courtesy of Aniplex / Studio DEEN

2027 Premiere on Crunchyroll

The anime will premiere in 2027 — no specific season or date confirmed yet — and will stream on Crunchyroll worldwide. Crunchyroll is available in Singapore, so local fans will be able to watch it without jumping through import hoops. No MUSE Asia partnership has been announced so far, meaning the primary streaming home for Southeast Asia is currently Crunchyroll. A full broadcast schedule is expected closer to the premiere.

Worth mentioning for newer fans: the manga’s 16 volumes are available in English and are worth reading ahead of the series. Catch up on more upcoming anime and manga news while you wait.

Green Yuri Anime: CloverWorks, Nirvana Opening Theme, January 2027

Nirvana’s 1991 grunge anthem “Breed” is officially the opening theme for the anime adaptation of Sumiko Arai’s manga The Guy She Was Interested in Wasn’t a Guy at All — and Dave Grohl himself helped break the news. Announced at Crunchyroll’s Anime Expo 2026 showcase in Los Angeles, the series premieres in January 2027 on Crunchyroll worldwide, including Singapore.

Meet Green Yuri: The Manga That Sold 1.6 Million Copies

Nicknamed “Green Yuri” by fans for its unmistakeable lime-green colour palette, the series follows Aya Osawa — a fashionable high schooler with a deep love for Western rock — who develops a crush on the cool, enigmatic clerk at her local CD shop. The twist: that clerk is Mitsuki Koga, a girl who attends Aya’s school and has been hiding in plain sight all along. As the two circle each other through shared playlists and stolen glances, a case of mistaken identity slowly deepens into something real.

Originally a Twitter short story (2021), the manga graduated to Pixiv Comics serialisation before landing a print run through KADOKAWA’s Kitora label. It took first place in the web manga category at the Next Manga Award 2023 and has since sold over 1.6 million copies worldwide — numbers that made an anime feel not just possible but necessary.

The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn’t a Guy At All | Official Teaser — via Crunchyroll on YouTube

CloverWorks Takes the Helm

Aya Osawa in the Green Yuri anime by CloverWorks
Image courtesy of Crunchyroll / CloverWorks

Studio CloverWorks — whose recent track record includes Oshi no Ko and The Dangers in My Heart — is handling animation. Anime News Network confirms Masashi Ishihama in the director’s chair, with Rino Yamazaki on series composition and Kanna Hirayama designing the characters. Voicing the leads are Mariya Ise as Mitsuki Koga and Akari Kito as Aya Osawa — both seasoned performers with strong track records in character-driven drama.

That Nirvana Moment

Green Yuri manga key visual at Anime Expo 2026
Image courtesy of Crunchyroll / Sumiko Arai (KADOKAWA)

“Breed”, from Nirvana’s landmark 1991 album Nevermind, has been officially licensed as the opening theme — the first time a Nirvana track has been officially used in a Japanese animated production. The announcement drew an audible reaction from the Anime Expo crowd, made all the more striking when a pre-recorded video message from Dave Grohl played on the AX screens.

“[This series is] the same message and aesthetic… the vibe, you know? It’s cool,” Grohl said in the message, as reported by Red Bean Anime. That Nirvana’s surviving members would pick this series — a story about two girls finding each other through music — to carry the band’s legacy into anime says something about how far the medium has reached.

Singapore Fans: Mark Your January 2027 Calendar

Crunchyroll is streaming the series globally, which means Singapore fans will be able to watch from the January 2027 premiere date. Four volumes of the manga are already available in English from Yen Press, giving you plenty of time to catch up before episode one drops. For yuri and romance anime fans in Singapore, this is shaping up to be the stand-out pick of that winter season.

Black Clover Season 2 Premieres at Anime Expo 2026 — Coming to Crunchyroll in October

After a five-year hiatus, Black Clover Season 2 made its world debut at Anime Expo 2026 in Los Angeles today — and for Singapore fans on Crunchyroll, the wait is nearly over. Studio Pierrot screened the first episode of the new season at the Peacock Theater on 4 July, with the full series confirmed to begin broadcasting in October 2026.

Black Clover Second Season | Official Trailer 2 — via Crunchyroll on YouTube

What’s Coming in Black Clover Season 2

Asta in Black Clover Season 2 — official promotional art
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / TV Tokyo

Season 2 picks up the Spade Kingdom Raid arc — the storyline beginning around volume 28 of Yūki Tabata’s manga. It’s the arc fans have been demanding for years: Asta and his devil Liebe pushing their Devil Union to its limit, Nacht’s gruelling training arc, and the Magic Knights launching a desperate all-out assault on the Spade Kingdom’s ruling Dark Triad.

The new key visual sets the stakes immediately. Asta dominates the centre in full Devil Union form, wild-eyed and wreathed in anti-magic shadows. Noelle rises in her Saint Valkyrie Dress; Yuno blazes with Spirit Dive. The tagline — 「倒して、生きる」 (“Defeat them, and live”) — signals this season will not ease anyone in gently.

The Anime Expo 2026 Panel

Black Clover Season 2 — Asta Devil Union cinematic promotional art
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / TV Tokyo

Today’s one-hour AX panel featured Asta’s voice actor Gakuto Kajiwara alongside the season’s new director Ayataka Tanemura, whose work on Black Clover: Sword of the Wizard King on Netflix earned wide praise. Joining him are script supervisor Keiichiro Ochi, character designers Itsuko Takeda and Kumiko Tokunaga, and composer Minako Seki.

Attendees got an exclusive early screening of Episode 1. Early audience impressions, as covered by ComicBook.com, suggest the new season drops viewers straight into the Spade Kingdom conflict with little pause for recap — exactly the approach long-time fans will appreciate.

Watching Black Clover Season 2 in Singapore

Black Clover official promotional art — Asta with Nacht and Yami
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / Shueisha

Crunchyroll holds exclusive global streaming rights for Black Clover Season 2, with episodes simulcasting alongside the TV Tokyo broadcast from October. Both Japanese audio with subtitles and an English dub are confirmed. Crunchyroll is fully available in Singapore — the complete first-season run of more than 170 episodes is already on the platform if you want to rewatch or catch up before October.

A specific premiere date within October has not yet been announced — expect confirmation closer to broadcast. Given Crunchyroll’s track record with major Shōnen Jump titles, a same-day Japan simulcast is almost certain.

Five Years in the Making

The original Black Clover TV anime ran from October 2017 to March 2021, adapting Asta’s journey from a magic-less orphan to a feared Black Bulls captain across more than 170 episodes. Since then, Tabata has kept the manga moving into its final arc, and the Sword of the Wizard King film bridged the gap — but the anime adaptation of the Spade Kingdom saga has been the white whale. October cannot come fast enough.

Keep an eye on our manga and anime coverage for updates as the October premiere date is pinned down.

Black Flag Resynced Out July 9 — Led by Ubisoft Singapore

Five days from now, Edward Kenway weighs anchor again — and the crew that rebuilt his story is based right here in Singapore. Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced launches on 9 July 2026 for PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, and it marks the first full remake in Ubisoft’s history.

Black Flag Resynced and Ubisoft Singapore’s Naval Legacy

The decision to assign the remake to Ubisoft Singapore is one with deep roots. The Singapore studio has spent years developing water rendering and naval gameplay systems on the Anvil engine — the same engine powering Assassin’s Creed Shadows — which makes Black Flag’s Caribbean world a natural fit for the team’s expertise.

“Ubisoft Singapore not only has a history of working on water tech through Anvil, we have a history with naval gameplay and stuff,” Creative Director Paul Fu told Game Informer. “When you put all those things together, it’s like, ‘Yeah, why not take a stab at it with Black Flag?’ It actually makes a lot of sense to try.”

Singapore leads a global co-development team spanning Ubisoft studios in Montreal, Barcelona, Belgrade, Bordeaux, Bucharest, Chengdu, Da Nang, India, Kyiv, Montpellier, Philippines, Quebec, Shanghai, and Sofia. The project puts Singapore at the creative centre of what is unambiguously a tentpole release for one of gaming’s biggest franchises.

Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced: Official Game Overview Trailer — via Assassin’s Creed on YouTube

Rebuilt Visuals — What the Anvil Engine Delivers

This is a ground-up rebuild, not a remaster. Ray-traced global illumination, micropolygon rendering, Atmos-driven dynamic weather, and modernised water physics replace the original’s 2013 visuals entirely. On PS5 three display modes are available: Performance (60fps, standard RT), Balance (40fps, enhanced RT), and High Quality (30fps, enhanced RT). PS5 Pro players get enhanced PSSR upscaling across all three. Xbox Series X matches the PS5 options; Xbox Series S runs at 30fps and 1620p. PC requires a 65 GB SSD and Windows 11, scaling from a GTX 1660 at 1080p/30fps up to RTX 4090 for 4K/60fps ultra.

Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced — rebuilt visuals on PS5 and PC
Image courtesy of Ubisoft

What’s New in Black Flag Resynced — Stealth, Combat and Naval

The remake adds substantive gameplay changes across the board. Stealth gets crouch-anywhere and dive-anywhere movement plus an observe mode for tagging enemies before moving in. Combat introduces a parry-driven system with new takedown animations. Naval combat expands with shrapnel barrels, 8-pounder cannons, new Jackdaw officers with special abilities, and a reworked Kenway’s Fleet for passive income generation. Ship customisation adds pets and skins to the Jackdaw. Ten new sea shanties have been recorded, and GRAMMY-nominated artist Woodkid is contributing a reimagined track — details due later in 2026.

Naval combat and gameplay in Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced
Image courtesy of Ubisoft

Matt Ryan Returns as Edward Kenway

The original voice actor Matt Ryan has returned to record new lines for the remake. Additional missions and scenes expand the story around fan-favourite characters — Blackbeard, Anne Bonny, and Calico Jack all get more to do. The Deluxe Edition (US$69.99, digital only) bundles the Master Assassin Character Pack and Naval Pack alongside the base game. Pre-orders across all editions include Blackbeard’s Crimson Pack: an exclusive Edward Kenway costume with matched swords and a pistol set.

Edward Kenway in Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced
Image courtesy of Ubisoft

Editions, Platforms and Singapore Availability

Three editions launch on 9 July:

  • Standard Edition — US$59.99 (physical and digital)
  • Deluxe Edition — US$69.99 (digital only, includes Master Assassin Character Pack and Naval Pack)
  • Collector’s Edition — US$199.99 (Edward figurine, metal brooch, SteelBook, cloth map)

Platforms: PS5, PS5 Pro, Xbox Series X|S, and PC via Steam, Epic Games Store, and Ubisoft Connect. Cloud streaming is available on Nvidia GeForce Now and Blacknut. SGD pricing through the PlayStation Store SG and local retailers is to be confirmed — check major game retailers and electronics chains in the run-up to 9 July. For more upcoming game news, we will have more coverage as the launch approaches.

Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced — Caribbean pirate adventure
Image courtesy of Ubisoft

Solo Leveling: Beyond the System Movie Is Officially in Production

Solo Leveling is heading to theatres. Solo Leveling: Beyond the System, a brand-new anime theatrical film, is officially in production — announced at the Crunchyroll Showcase at Anime Expo 2026 on 3 July by Aleks Le, Sung Jinwoo’s English voice actor, who introduced a teaser concept video and the film’s first key visual. A-1 Pictures, the studio behind Seasons 1 and 2, is back on animation.

What Beyond the System Is About

Sung Jinwoo awakening to new power in Solo Leveling
Image courtesy of A-1 Pictures / Aniplex

The title pulls from one of the series’ most beloved early moments: the Double Dungeon Arc, where a near-dead Jinwoo first received the System that would reshape his life. Beyond the System picks up after Season 2’s Ant King raid on Jeju Island and follows Jinwoo back to the Cartenon Temple — the original dungeon where everything started — to uncover the truth about the System that gave him his power.

The released key visual shows Jinwoo with his signature blue aura eyes glowing at an intensity that implies he has risen to a level of power that transcends the System itself. A theatrical Japan premiere is targeted for 2027; an international cinema schedule, including Singapore, has not yet been announced.

Season 3 Confirmed Too

Sung Jinwoo commanding his shadow army in the Solo Leveling anime
Image courtesy of A-1 Pictures / Aniplex

Alongside the movie announcement, D&C Media confirmed Solo Leveling Season 3 is in development, with an expected release window of 2027 to 2028. The franchise is expanding on two fronts simultaneously — the movie appears to be a standalone bridge story rather than a replacement for the main season arc, which will continue with its own release.

For Singapore fans, both seasons streamed on Crunchyroll, which is fully available here, and Season 2’s Arise from the Shadows cour was among the most-discussed anime in the local community this year. The same distribution pipeline makes Crunchyroll the likely home for Beyond the System‘s digital release as well, though a local theatrical run would depend on distribution partners in the region.

The Production Team

The core production lineup remains intact: A-1 Pictures on animation, co-produced by Aniplex, Netmarble, D&C MEDIA, Kakao Piccoma, and Crunchyroll. That same team delivered the shadow army sequences and dungeon boss fights that became some of the most shared anime clips of 2024 and 2025 — Singapore fan servers included. More details — director, full cast, release windows — are expected as production progresses.

Stay tuned to our anime and manga coverage for every update on Beyond the System and Season 3 as they land.

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 — New Crew, Fall 2026 on Netflix

Four years after Cyberpunk: Edgerunners became one of Netflix’s most acclaimed anime series — scoring a rare 100% on Rotten Tomatoes and sending millions of fans flooding back into Night City — Studio TRIGGER and CD Projekt Red are ready to go again. Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 lands on Netflix this Fall 2026, and if the buzz from Anime Expo 2026 is anything to go by, Singapore fans should start clearing their weekend schedules.

The first episode screened at AX 2026’s July 3 panel, with showrunner Bartosz Sztybor, executive producer Saya Elder, director Kai Ikarashi, and voice actor Nazeeh Tarsha in attendance. Audience reactions have been enthusiastic — though plot details are being kept under wraps.

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 official key art — four new characters in Night City, Netflix Fall 2026
Image courtesy of CD Projekt Red × TRIGGER

A Standalone Story — No Need to Have Watched Season 1

The biggest news for newcomers: Edgerunners 2 is a completely standalone 10-episode series. The new season follows four brand-new characters in Night City with no narrative connection to David Martinez from the original. You can jump straight in — though you’d be robbing yourself of one of the finest 10-episode anime runs ever made if you skip Season 1.

The season’s creative pitch is as bleak as Night City deserves: “When the world is blinded by spectacle, what extremes do you have to go to make your story matter?” Four outcasts, four desperate motivations, one city with no interest in happy endings. The original song accompanying the teaser, You Can’t Run From Me by Rico Nasty, sets the tone perfectly.

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 | Official Teaser 2 — via Cyberpunk 2077 on YouTube

Meet the New Night City Crew

The four main characters cover very different corners of Night City’s social hierarchy — which is exactly how you get good drama:

  • Weak “King” Kingsley (Japanese CV: Kentaro Tone) — A veteran edgerunner living in the shadow of his former glory. Old enough to know how the city works, stubborn enough to still think he can beat it.
  • D (Japanese CV: Kouki Uchiyama; English CV: Nazeeh Tarsha) — A Nomad netrunner from the Snake Nation clan with a singular mission: revenge against the corp that wiped out his people. Uchiyama is known to anime fans here for Black Clover and Blue Lock.
  • Roman Carax (Japanese CV: Momoka Terasawa) — A young cinephile documenting Night City’s reality through a lens, in a world where truth itself is a weapon.
  • Talia Yang (Japanese CV: Akari Kito) — Corpo-raised but drawn irresistibly toward the chrome and violence of the streets. Kito voices Nezuko in Demon Slayer and Tohru in Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid — she has the range for wherever Talia’s arc goes.
Roman Carax — young cinephile character from Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2, holding a camera device
Image courtesy of CD Projekt Red × TRIGGER

TRIGGER Returns — With a New Director at the Helm

Studio TRIGGER is back in the driver’s seat, and their visual DNA is unmistakeable in the teaser — the kinetic action, the bold flat colours that still somehow crackle with energy, the character designs by Ichigo Kanno that feel TRIGGER even in a Western sci-fi setting.

One significant change: director Hiroyuki Imaishi (Kill la Kill, Gurren Lagann, Promare, and Season 1 of Edgerunners) is not returning. Kai Ikarashi steps into some enormous shoes as the new director. That’s worth flagging honestly — Imaishi’s kinetic excess was a huge part of what made Season 1 so visceral. Whether Ikarashi can match that energy is the open question. On the writing side, CD Projekt Red’s Bartosz Sztybor returns as co-screenwriter alongside Masahiko Otsuka, which gives us confidence the Night City storytelling instincts are intact.

Talia Yang in action from Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 official teaser — pink-haired fighter with cybernetic enhancements
Image courtesy of CD Projekt Red × TRIGGER

When Can Singapore Fans Watch?

Edgerunners 2 is a Netflix exclusive — which means Singapore fans get it the moment it drops, no import or workarounds required. A specific premiere date hasn’t been confirmed beyond “Fall 2026,” but given Netflix’s track record of simultaneous global launches for its anime originals (and how hard they pushed Season 1 here), expect a same-day release with subtitles and an English dub to follow.

In the meantime, the official Edgerunners 2 website has character profiles up. And if the teaser has given you the itch to revisit Night City itself, Cyberpunk 2077 with the Phantom Liberty DLC is routinely on sale across digital storefronts — it’s a good time to go back. More game news here.

GigaBash Ultraman Zero DLC Out July 9 — Two Iconic Ultras Enter the Kaiju Arena

Malaysian kaiju-brawler GigaBash is about to get a lot more legendary. Developer Passion Republic Games has announced the Ultraman Zero DLC, adding two of the Ultraman franchise’s most iconic rivals — the heroic Ultraman Zero and the fallen Ultraman Belial — to the roster. It drops on July 9, 2026 (11am SGT on July 10), in time to celebrate Ultraman’s 60th anniversary.

Ultraman Zero vs. Belial — A Rivalry 17 Years in the Making

Ultraman Belial and Ultraman Zero face off in GigaBash at night in a city stage
Image courtesy of Passion Republic Games

The DLC brings both characters in their debut forms from the 2009 classic film Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy — The Movie, the film that first pitted the two against each other in what became one of the franchise’s most beloved confrontations. For Singapore fans who grew up with Ultraman on afternoon television, seeing these two in a modern kaiju brawler is a serious nostalgia hit.

Each character arrives with a distinct playstyle that maps to their on-screen personalities. Ultraman Zero is the precision fighter — his Zero Sluggers can be hurled to zone enemies at range, while his Emerium Slash lets him punish from mid-distance. His move set emphasises space martial arts and reactive play, rewarding players who like to read the opponent and counterattack.

GigaBash – Ultraman Zero DLC: Official Trailer — via ULTRAMAN Official English Channel on YouTube

Ultraman Belial: All Rage, All Power

Ultraman Belial fires his Giga Battlenizer at Ultraman Zero in a lava stage in GigaBash
Image courtesy of Passion Republic Games

Ultraman Belial is the counterpoint in every sense. Armed with the Giga Battlenizer, he’s a high-damage, aggressive character whose attacks carry the fury of someone who threw away everything for power. Dark fireballs cover the arena, the Belial Whip controls space at close range, and Belial Genothunder can shred opponents who overcommit. He’s a character who punishes recklessness — because he embodies it.

What makes the DLC interesting beyond the gameplay is how faithfully Passion Republic Games has translated both characters’ mythologies. The asymmetry in the matchup isn’t just aesthetic: Zero’s arc in the 2009 film is literally about overcoming his worst impulses to become a true hero, while Belial represents the road not taken. The lore runs deep, and the development team has clearly leaned into it.

Available on All Major Platforms — No Switch 2 Restrictions Here

GigaBash Ultraman Zero DLC character reveal art — Ultraman Zero on blue, Ultraman Belial on red
Image courtesy of Passion Republic Games / ©Tsuburaya Productions

The Ultraman Zero DLC releases across PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC via Steam, Epic Games Store, and STOVE. Singapore players on any of those platforms can grab it at launch. Note that due to regional licensing, the DLC is not available in Mainland China — no such restrictions apply here in Singapore.

If you haven’t played GigaBash yet, the base game is already a solid pick for fans of kaiju movies and arena brawlers. The roster leans heavily into tokusatsu icons alongside original kaiju, making it one of the few games where the Southeast Asian development scene has genuinely punched above its weight on the global stage. Check out more game news on GameTrader.SG.