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.

Kagurabachi Anime Makes Its World Premiere at Anime Expo 2026

The Kagurabachi anime is making its global debut this week: the first 20 minutes of Episode 1 are being screened at Anime Expo 2026 in Los Angeles today, Thursday 3 July — a full nine months before the series premieres on television in April 2027.

Episode 1 World Premiere at Anime Expo 2026

The world premiere screening takes place at JW Marriott Diamond from 4:45 to 6:05 PM PDT on 3 July (7:45–9:05 AM SGT on 4 July). Alongside the screening, a special panel features Taihi Kimura (voice of protagonist Chihiro Rokuhira), Takuro Imamura (Editor of the Kagurabachi manga at Weekly Shonen Jump), and Koichi Yasuda (Producer of the Kagurabachi anime). For those who can’t make it to LA, the world tour continues — Paris, Germany, and New York are next in line before the series begins its regular broadcast.

Kagurabachi Anime World Tour premiere screening at Anime Expo 2026 on July 3
Image courtesy of Project Kagurabachi / Shueisha
KAGURABACHI|Official Teaser Trailer — via SHOCHIKU anime チャンネル【公式】 on YouTube

Chihiro Rokuhira: A Swordsmith’s Son on a Path of Revenge

Kagurabachi follows Chihiro Rokuhira, the son of a legendary swordsmith who sets out on a blood-soaked quest for vengeance after tragedy strikes his family. Armed with one of his father’s famed Enchanted Blades — a sentient weapon that manifests as a black goldfish when dormant — Chihiro navigates a world of sorcerers, criminal syndicates, and supernatural threats. The manga was created by Takeru Hokazono and has run in Weekly Shonen Jump since September 2023, selling over 4 million copies and winning the Next Manga Award 2024. The anime announcement trailer crossed 6 million views in under 24 hours — a number that signals just how long this fandom has been waiting.

Chihiro Rokuhira character design for the Kagurabachi anime, voiced by Taihi Kimura
Image courtesy of Project Kagurabachi / Shueisha

The Studio and Creative Team

Animation is handled by Studio Cypic — the recently rebranded Cygames Pictures — with Tetsuya Takeuchi as director. Takeuchi is known to long-time anime fans as the person behind the legendary Rock Lee vs Gaara fight episode in Naruto, so expectations for the action choreography here are sky-high. Character design is by Keigo Sasaki (Blue Exorcist, The Seven Deadly Sins). The confirmed cast includes Tomokazu Seki as Chihiro’s father Kunishige Rokuhira and Katsuyuki Konishi as Togo Shiba.

Kagurabachi Anime World Tour Schedule

Kagurabachi Anime World Tour Part 1 banner featuring Anime Expo, Japan Expo, AnimagiC, and Anime NYC
Image courtesy of Project Kagurabachi / Shueisha

The Anime World Tour Part 1 hits four major conventions before the full series rolls out:

  • Anime Expo, Los Angeles — 3 July 2026 (world premiere, first 20 min of Ep. 1)
  • Japan Expo, Paris — 9 July 2026 (3:30–4:30 PM, Yuzu Stage)
  • AnimagiC, Mannheim — 1 August 2026 (10:30–11:00 AM, Monorheinhalle)
  • Anime NYC, New York — 22 August 2026 (Main Stage)

A Japan-exclusive tour finale is also confirmed, where the complete first episode will be screened ahead of the broadcast — the only way to watch it in full before April 2027.

Streaming on Crunchyroll — What Singapore Fans Need to Know

Crunchyroll is the confirmed global streaming home for Kagurabachi, covering worldwide territories including Singapore when the series premieres in April 2027. There’s no Singapore-specific event or early screening date announced yet — for now, catching up on the source manga on Shonen Jump is the way to go while the wait ticks down. Browse more anime news on GameTrader for everything else landing on Crunchyroll this season.

The Apothecary Diaries Movie Opens December 11 — Original Story and First Trailer Revealed

The Apothecary Diaries is heading to cinemas. Japan gets the franchise’s first theatrical film on December 11, 2026 — the full title was confirmed today alongside a teaser trailer and the news that this is an entirely original story by the light novel’s own author.

The Apothecary Diaries movie scene showing Maomao and Jinshi travelling to the southern water city
Image courtesy of TOHO Animation

What the Apothecary Diaries Movie Is About

The film’s full title is Gekijouban Kusuriya no Hitorigoto: Boki no Hihou (劇場版 薬屋のひとりごと 亡妃の秘宝) — The Apothecary Diaries: The Secret Treasure of the Deceased Consort. Unlike many anime films that adapt an existing arc, this one is an original story conceived by the franchise’s own light novel author, Natsu Hyuga.

The plot follows Maomao and Jinshi as they travel south to return the remains of a concubine who died in the imperial palace five years earlier to her homeland. They arrive in Minanzhou (未南州), a lively water city, and find themselves tangled up in secrets surrounding the consort’s preserved body, a hidden treasure buried somewhere in the city’s waterways, and a band of water pirates who are very much part of the story. The announcement tagline promises this is the series’ largest mystery yet.

The Apothecary Diaries: Season 3 & Movie Production Announcement — via TOHO animation チャンネル on YouTube (Japanese)

New Character: Muqing, Voiced by Mariya Ise

Aoi Yuki (Maomao) and Takeo Otsuka (Jinshi) both return in their lead roles. Joining them is a new character: Muqing (沐清), a young boy described as holding the key to the mystery at the heart of the film. He is voiced by Mariya Ise, a veteran anime voice actress well known among Singapore fans for her roles as Killua Zoldyck in Hunter x Hunter and Levy McGarden in Fairy Tail. Muqing appears closely tied to the deceased consort’s clan, and the announcement suggests his backstory drives much of the film’s second half.

Muqing character visual from The Apothecary Diaries movie — voiced by Mariya Ise
Image courtesy of TOHO Animation

Director and Creative Team

Norihiro Naganuma — who directed Season 1 and served as chief director on Season 2 — returns to helm the film. That continuity is reassuring. Naganuma has a clear feel for the show’s pacing and its particular blend of sharp comedy, slow-burn mystery and political tension. With the story also penned by Natsu Hyuga herself, this is as canonical as a theatrical film can get.

Scene from The Apothecary Diaries movie set in the water city of Minanzhou
Image courtesy of TOHO Animation

Season 3 Is Also Coming — October 2026

The movie is not the only thing on the horizon. The Apothecary Diaries Season 3 is confirmed for October 2026, running in two cours (October 2026 and April 2027), with Akinori Fudesaka directing. The story moves beyond the inner palace and broadens into a wider world — early teasers hint at national upheaval and a mysterious shrine maiden. For Singapore fans who followed Seasons 1 and 2 on Crunchyroll, the franchise’s second half of 2026 is shaping up to be very full.

The Apothecary Diaries movie promotional still
Image courtesy of TOHO Animation

When Can Singapore Watch the Movie?

December 11 is for Japanese cinemas only at this stage. No international theatrical run or streaming date has been announced for Southeast Asia. Both seasons of the TV series are available on Crunchyroll, so a streaming window for the film eventually seems likely — but nothing is confirmed yet. We will update this post as details emerge. In the meantime, browse all our anime and manga coverage on GameTrader for more updates from the season ahead.

Code Geass Turns 20: Rozé of the Recapture Hits TV on 11 July, New Anime Revealed

Code Geass is turning 20 this year, and Sunrise and Bandai Namco are not letting the milestone pass quietly. Code Geass: Rozé of the Recapture — the eight-part ONA that’s been streaming on Disney+ Singapore since 2024 — makes its Japanese TV broadcast debut on 11 July 2026, a brand-new anime sequel has been announced, and a two-city anniversary exhibition is headed to Tokyo and Osaka later this year.

Code Geass Rozé protagonist Ash Phoenix with Zi-Apollo mecha
Image courtesy of Sunrise / Bandai Namco

Rozé of the Recapture Comes to TV

Rozé of the Recapture begins its Japanese television run on MBS, TBS, CBC, and BS-TBS (the Animeism block) from 11 July, airing as a 12-episode series — the ONA chapters restructured and expanded for broadcast. The story follows Ash Phoenix and his Zi-Apollo Knightmare Frame as he fights to reclaim a Europe under Britannian occupation, set after the events of the original series. A new key visual has been produced specifically for the TV run, separate from the original ONA promotional artwork.

Singapore fans already have access: Rozé of the Recapture is streaming in full on Disney+ Singapore right now. If you missed the ONA run, it’s worth catching up before the TV broadcast conversation picks up in July. The original 50-episode Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion series is also free to watch on the official Sunrise YouTube channel, where it was made available from 28 December 2025.

Code Geass Rozé Zi-Artemis Knightmare Frame from Disney+ Singapore trailer
Image courtesy of Sunrise / Bandai Namco

New Anime: Code Geass: Aspal the Star Chaser

Alongside the TV broadcast news, a new Code Geass anime has been announced: Code Geass: Hoshi Oi no Aspal (working English title: Code Geass: Aspal the Star Chaser). The project is directed by Kazuya Nomura, with further cast and production details to follow. The English title has not been officially confirmed yet — expect a formal announcement closer to production milestones.

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

20th Anniversary Exhibition: Tokyo and Osaka

A dedicated 20th anniversary exhibition organised by Movic (株式会社ムービック) has been announced for two Japanese cities. The Tokyo leg runs at Space Galleria (Animate Ikebukuro 8F) from 4 September to 12 October 2026; the Osaka leg follows at Space Gratus (Animate Osaka Nihonbashi 3F) from 6 November to 7 December 2026. Details were reported by Famitsu on 2 July (Japanese) and have not yet been covered in English-language anime press at time of writing. No international touring dates have been announced.

Rounding out the anniversary slate: a crossover manga pairing Gundam Wing and Code Geass, drawn by Tomofumi Ogasawara, is also in the works — a secondary project, but a notable one given both franchises’ histories with Sunrise. For the latest on all things Code Geass and anime in Singapore, follow our manga and anime coverage.

PlayStation Ends New Disc Games from January 2028

Physical game discs on PlayStation have an expiry date: Sony Interactive Entertainment confirmed on 1 July 2026 that all new games releasing on PlayStation consoles will stop being sold on disc from January 2028. It is the end of an era stretching back to the original PlayStation in 1994.

PlayStation Disc Production to End January 2028 – IGN Daily Fix — via IGN on YouTube

What Sony Actually Announced

In a post on the official PlayStation Blog, Senior Director of content communications Sid Shuman stated: “This is a natural direction for Sony Interactive Entertainment to adapt to consumer trends as the general preference for digital media significantly outpaces physical discs.”

The move covers all new releases — Sony’s own first-party titles and third-party games alike — from January 2028 onward. Titles already on shelves or launching before that date are unaffected; any disc you own will continue to work on your PS5. Physical retail will not vanish entirely: Sony confirmed new games will still be sold at retailers, but in “digital format only” — most likely through download cards or code-in-box packaging, though the exact format has yet to be confirmed.

The numbers back Sony’s call. According to the company’s own FY2025 financial results, roughly 85 per cent of full-game sales on PS4 and PS5 are already digital.

Close-up of the PlayStation 5 disc drive slot
Image courtesy of Sony Interactive Entertainment

Remember When PlayStation Mocked Xbox Over Exactly This?

Here is the part that stings if you have been gaming long enough. At E3 2013, Microsoft floated an original Xbox One built around always-online checks and restrictions on used and shared games. Sony went straight for the throat. On stage it confirmed the PS4 would happily play used games with no online check-in required, and the crowd erupted. Then it drove the point home online with a now-legendary clip — the “Official PlayStation Used Game Instructional Video” — in which the entire tutorial for sharing a game was one person handing the disc to another.

Official PlayStation Used Game Instructional Video — via PlayStation on YouTube

That clip became one of the most celebrated moments in console-war history, and for years it was the cleanest summary of what PlayStation stood for: you buy the disc, you own the disc, you do what you like with it. Thirteen years on, Sony is quietly walking that promise to the door. The company that won so much goodwill by defending physical ownership is now the one retiring it.

What Changes — and What Doesn’t

Here is a quick breakdown of what the announcement actually changes:

  • New games from January 2028 onwards: no disc version will be produced.
  • Games you already own on disc: continue to work on PS5 exactly as before.
  • Pre-owned and resale of existing disc games: still possible — just not for new-gen titles released after the cutoff.
  • Physical retail: remains open, but the format shifts to something code-based (to be confirmed by Sony).
  • Collector and limited editions: publishers may still release physical-style boxes with download codes after 2028, but disc-inside packaging ends.

In practical terms, if you are planning to build a physical PS5 library, the window is now clearly defined: anything releasing before January 2028 may be your last chance to own it on disc.

PS3 and PS Vita Stores Are Also Closing

Bundled into the same announcement, Sony confirmed that the PlayStation online stores for PS3 and PS Vita will close globally in 2027. This echoes the 2021 closure attempt that Sony reversed following intense fan backlash — this time, the decision appears final. Digital-only games on those platforms that you have not yet purchased will no longer be available to buy once the stores close, though previously purchased content will remain downloadable “for the foreseeable future.” If you have a PS3 or Vita backlog you have been meaning to clear, now is the time to complete those purchases.

When the Servers Go Dark, Your Games Can Go With Them

The Vita and PS3 store closures are a preview of the real cost of an all-digital future, and it is worth being honest about it. A disc is yours forever — pop it in and it plays, servers or no servers, publisher alive or long gone. A digital licence is a permission slip. When the storefront shuts, the servers go offline, or a publisher pulls the listing, the game you “bought” can simply vanish, and there is no shelf to pull it back off.

We have already watched it happen — delisted titles, de-authorised licences, and live-service games switched off for good with nothing left to show for the money. That is an entire slice of gaming history a future player may never be able to legally buy, borrow, or trade. Physical media is how games survive their own era; it is the reason a curious kid can still dig a PS2 classic out of a bin at a flea market decades later. Take the disc away and you do not just lose convenience — you chip away at the whole culture of retro gaming and preservation that keeps these games alive.

What Singapore Gamers and Collectors Should Know

For Singapore, this announcement lands on several fronts at once.

The local pre-owned game scene — shops that buy and resell physical PS5 discs — depends on a steady pipeline of new disc releases. Once January 2028 passes and no new discs are pressed, that pipeline runs dry for new-gen titles. The trade-in market for games released before the cutoff will persist for some years, but its long-term outlook changes considerably. Expect to see how major game retailers and electronics chains in Singapore adapt their trade-in and resale offerings as we get closer to 2028.

For collectors, particularly those who favour limited editions and steelbooks, the situation is more nuanced. Premium physical editions of titles launching before 2028 will still come on disc. After that, whether publishers will produce collector-tier packaging with download cards is genuinely unknown. If there are upcoming physical editions on your radar — GTA VI disc copies, for instance, or highly anticipated JRPGs and action titles expected in late 2026 and 2027 — picking them up in disc form while you still can is worth considering.

There is also the Japan import angle. Singapore’s gaming community includes many players who source games from Japan, where the physical market remains exceptionally strong. Sony’s announcement is global, so Japanese PS5 releases will also go disc-free from January 2028. Japanese-exclusive physical editions — a popular collector target precisely because they are distinct from Western releases — will disappear for new-gen titles after the cutoff.

PlayStation official logo
Image courtesy of Sony Interactive Entertainment

Why This One Hits Home for Us

We will be upfront: this news is personal for us. GameTrader.SG started as a passion project, back when the only way Singapore gamers swapped titles was posting on online forums — a thread here, a “WTT” reply there, meeting a stranger at an MRT station to trade a game you had finished for one you hadn’t. We grew up doing exactly that: lending discs to friends, swapping cartridges with our cousins, arguing over who got to borrow the good one first. Those trades were how we discovered half the games we still love today.

So we built GameTrader.SG to keep that alive — the first and longest-running platform in Singapore dedicated purely to game disc trading. Today the community has grown to 19,584 members, with 73,616 listings posted and 50,740 games sold and traded — every one of them a physical copy that moved from one player’s shelf to another’s. None of that works without discs. A digital licence cannot be lent to a friend, gifted to a cousin, or resold once you are done with it. That simple act — passing a game to someone else — is exactly what an all-digital future quietly takes away, and it is the very thing we have spent years building this community around.

Is the PS5 Disc Edition Still Worth Buying?

If you already own a PS5 disc edition, your console is not going anywhere — it plays every disc you have now and every disc released before January 2028. The real question is whether the disc drive justifies the premium over the PS5 Digital Edition going forward. For players who already buy digitally, the Digital Edition becomes the clearer value proposition sooner. For collectors building a physical library right now, the disc edition remains the right call — at least until the cutoff arrives.

One more item to flag: Sony has made no official statement about the PS6’s hardware, but analysts are widely reading this announcement as a strong signal that Sony’s next console will launch without a disc drive at all. Nothing is confirmed, but it is the logical read of this policy direction.

Stay across the latest game industry news on GameTrader.SG as more details emerge on the post-2028 physical retail strategy.

Black Clover Season 2 Returns in October — Episode 1 Premieres at Anime Expo This Saturday

After five years, one movie, and the conclusion of Yuki Tabata’s manga, Black Clover Season 2 is officially happening — and it’s coming sooner than many fans expected. The new season is confirmed for an October 2026 broadcast start, with Studio Pierrot returning to handle animation and the full original voice cast reprising their roles.

Episode 1 Premieres at Anime Expo This Saturday

Black Clover Season 2 Anime Expo 2026 panel announcement — July 4
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / Shueisha

Before the October broadcast begins, the first episode gets its world premiere at Anime Expo 2026 in Los Angeles this Saturday, 4 July, from 1:30 PM to 2:30 PM Pacific time. Director Ayataka Tanemura and Asta’s voice actor Gakuto Kajiwara will be at the panel in person. Singapore fans watching the AX news feed live: that session runs Sunday 5 July at 4:30 AM SGT — probably one for the truly dedicated.

The panel will include the episode 1 screening and additional announcements, so expect new details about the season — episode count, OP/ED themes, and possibly a premiere date — to surface over the weekend.

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

The Spade Kingdom Raid Arc — Where the Story Goes

Asta in Devil Union mode — Black Clover Season 2
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / Shueisha

Season 2 picks up where Season 1 left off in 2021: the Clover Kingdom’s Magic Knights launching their all-out assault on the Spade Kingdom to rescue Captain Yami and William Vangeance. Asta’s Devil Union with Liebe — teased extensively in the trailers — is the centrepiece of the new season’s power scaling, alongside Yuno’s Spirit Dive and Nacht’s Devil Unite techniques.

Unlike the original run, there’s no concern about the anime outpacing the source material. Tabata’s manga wrapped up after over 11 years of serialisation, which means the production team has the full story to work with — a significant advantage that should translate into a tighter, more purposeful adaptation.

The production team for Season 2: director Ayataka Tanemura (who also directed Black Clover: Sword of the Wizard King), series scripts by Keiichiro Ochi, character design by Itsuko Takeda and Kumiko Tokunaga, and music by Minako Seki.

Where Singapore Fans Can Watch

Asta full Devil Union form with lightning — Black Clover Season 2
Image courtesy of Studio Pierrot / Shueisha

Crunchyroll has announced streaming rights for the US and other international regions, but explicitly excludes Asia from its distribution deal. That means Singapore fans will need to look elsewhere for a legal stream — the platform for Asia has not been officially confirmed at the time of writing. The original series was available in Singapore via both Crunchyroll and Amazon Prime Video, so Prime Video or another regional service is the most likely home for Season 2 in our market. Watch the official Black Clover social channels for a regional streaming announcement closer to October.

We’ll be following this one closely as Anime Expo announcements roll in over the weekend. In the meantime, catch up on the other anime arriving this season — the summer 2026 slate is stacked.

Pokémon GO Turns 10: GO Fest Global Goes Free and Mega Mewtwo Debuts This Month

Ten years ago this month, the world started walking to parks and bumping into lamp posts — and Pokémon GO has never really let us stop. Niantic is marking the milestone with a packed July schedule every Singapore trainer should bookmark: a free GO Fest Global event, the debut of Mega Mewtwo X and Y, and a Community Day starring Sobble.

Pokémon GO Fest 2026 Global — official artwork showing Pokémon gathering in a park
Image courtesy of Niantic / Pokémon GO

10th Anniversary Party: 4–6 July

The birthday bash runs from Saturday 4 July to Monday 6 July (until 8 p.m. local time each day). Trainers get 4× XP and 4× Stardust for catching Pokémon, plus the debut of Gimmighoul holding a special 10th Anniversary Coin — a variant not seen before. Party-hat Charmander, Squirtle and Bulbasaur return with boosted Shiny rates, and evolving a Charizard, Venusaur or Blastoise during the window unlocks the legacy Community Day moves Blast Burn, Frenzy Plant and Hydro Cannon respectively. Singapore’s green corridors — East Coast Park, Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park, Orchard Road, the Botanic Gardens — tend to have the densest lured PokéStops during major events, so plan your route early.

Community Day — Sobble on 4 July, 2–5 p.m.

Pokémon GO Community Day featuring Sobble — official Niantic artwork
Image courtesy of Niantic / Pokémon GO

Community Day falls on the same Saturday as the Anniversary Party kickoff, so the bonuses run in parallel. Sobble is the star, 2–5 p.m. local time, with increased Shiny rates in the wild. Evolve it all the way to Inteleon during the event or within four hours after (by 9 p.m.) and it learns Hydro Cannon. The day also brings 2× Catch Candy, 2× Candy XL, 3-hour Incense, ¼ Egg hatch distance, and lures that last for an hour. Full event details are on the official Pokémon GO Community Day announcement.

#PokemonGOFest2026: Global | Community Celebrations — via Pokémon GO on YouTube

GO Fest 2026: Global — Free for the First Time Ever

Pokémon GO Fest 2026 — Mewtwo promotional art featuring the GO Fest 2026 logo
Image courtesy of Niantic / Pokémon GO

GO Fest 2026: Global runs 11–12 July (10 a.m. 11 July to 7 p.m. 12 July, local time) — and for the first time since GO Fest began, no ticket purchase is required. Every trainer logs in and gets access: 1-hour Lures, 1-hour Incense, and up to 9 free Raid Passes per day.

The featured encounters are headline material. Zeraora makes its Pokémon GO debut via Special Research during GO Fest. And the raid tier gets a new category: Super Mega Raids, where Mega Mewtwo X and Mega Mewtwo Y debut simultaneously. The twist — every trainer in the raid lobby must have a Mega-Evolved Pokémon active. Every Mega Mewtwo caught arrives with at least one Mega Level already unlocked. A branching Timed Research lets you prioritise whichever form you want.

Between the Anniversary Party and GO Fest, there is a Road of Legends event (6–10 July) bridging the two. The full event lineup is live at the official GO Fest 2026: Global page and the 10th Anniversary Party announcement. Check our game news coverage for more on what Singapore players have to look forward to this July.

Palworld 1.0 Launches July 10 With New Pals and the World Tree

After two and a half years in Early Access, Pocketpair’s monster-capture survival game Palworld is going 1.0 on July 10, 2026 — and the Japanese studio is calling it the biggest update the game has ever seen. Twenty-seven pages of patch notes, more new Pals than any previous update, and the long-awaited World Tree region are all on the table.

Palworld 1.0 Cinematic Trailer — via Pocketpair Palworld on YouTube

What’s New in Palworld 1.0

Pocketpair announced the 1.0 release at Summer Game Fest 2026, framing it as a package that delivers “a deeper and more evolved experience befitting an official release.” The headline additions:

  • New Pals — more than in any single update before it, with the cinematic trailer teasing at least one that transforms into a usable sword and a colossal flying creature linked to the World Tree
  • Revamped combat — “new ways to wield Pals as weapons directly” are confirmed, reshaping how you use companions in the field
  • Genetic Recombination breeding system — a new layer to Pal cultivation beyond the original breeding mechanics
  • Overhauled progression — significant stat and skill system revisions throughout
  • Server Clustering for dedicated servers, making large-group multiplayer sessions more stable
  • Story content — proper narrative missions woven into the new region
Three fluffy Palworld Pals armed with machine guns behind sandbags
Image courtesy of Pocketpair

Pocketpair’s global communications lead confirmed the 1.0 changelog runs to approximately 27 pages — which, for a game that was already receiving substantial updates throughout Early Access, signals just how much ground this release covers.

The World Tree — Palworld’s Long-Awaited Endgame Region

The centrepiece of 1.0 is the World Tree region: a new island that roughly doubles the playable area of Palpagos and unlocks what Pocketpair has been hinting at as the game’s true endgame destination. In the cinematic trailer, it’s framed as a place that has loomed just out of reach since launch — visible on the horizon, now finally open.

Player riding a dragon-type Pal firing energy blasts in Palworld's open world
Image courtesy of Pocketpair

Full patch notes haven’t been released ahead of launch, so the complete contents of the World Tree — bosses, exclusive Pals, story beats — remain under wraps for now. Pocketpair has kept the details deliberately sparse, which probably means the reveal moments are meant to land in-game.

Every Platform, One Date — Singapore Players Take Note

Palworld 1.0 drops simultaneously on PC (Steam), PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, Mac, and Xbox Game Pass on July 10. Singapore players on PC can expect the update live at roughly 8–10 AM SGT (matching the 9–11 AM JST window Pocketpair indicated).

Pink Palworld Pals working in a factory conveyor line
Image courtesy of Pocketpair

On Steam, Palworld is currently available for S$18.20 (30% off from its standard S$26.00) — so if you haven’t picked it up yet, now is a natural entry point: you’d be buying into the complete 1.0 game from its first day. The PS5 version is available via the PlayStation Store Singapore, and Xbox Game Pass subscribers already have access. The 1.0 update itself is free for all existing owners on all platforms.

Palworld launched in Steam Early Access in January 2024 and became a genuine cultural moment — eight million players in its first weekend, with Singapore gaming communities going hard on its blend of creature-catching, survival crafting, and gloriously chaotic combat. This 1.0 is the version Pocketpair has been building towards ever since. Check out more game news on GameTrader.SG.

Keep Your Old World, or Start Fresh?

Player fighting Mammorest 'King of the Forest' boss in Palworld
Image courtesy of Pocketpair

Pocketpair has confirmed that existing save data is fully compatible with 1.0 — you won’t lose your bases, your Pals, or your progress when the update drops. That said, the studio has gently recommended a fresh playthrough to experience the overhauled mechanics from the ground up, since many of the new systems are designed to unfold as you progress rather than bolt onto a late-game world.

For Singapore players who burned through Early Access in 2024 and moved on: July 10 is a solid reason to come back. For anyone who never tried Palworld: S$18.20 on Steam for the full 1.0 release is as clean an entry point as you’re going to get.

Halo Comes to PS5: Singapore Pricing and What’s New in Campaign Evolved

For the first time in gaming history, a Halo game is landing on a PlayStation console — and Singapore PS5 owners can pre-order it today. Halo: Campaign Evolved, developed by Halo Studios and published by Xbox Game Studios, launches on 28 July 2026 globally, with PlayStation Asia regions including Singapore going live on 29 July. The Standard Edition is priced at S$79.90 on the Singapore PlayStation Store, with a Premium Edition at S$109.90 that unlocks up to five days of early access — beginning 24 July in Singapore.

Halo: Campaign Evolved | New Missions Trailer | XBOX Games Showcase 2026 — via XBOX on YouTube

A Historic First: Halo Finally on PlayStation

Microsoft’s flagship shooter franchise has been a cornerstone of Xbox since the console’s debut in November 2001, when the original Halo: Combat Evolved shipped as a launch title. For over two decades, playing Halo meant owning an Xbox or a gaming PC. That exclusivity ends this July. Halo: Campaign Evolved is a ground-up remake of that original campaign — rebuilt with high-definition visuals, updated cinematics, and refined controls — and it is launching natively on PlayStation 5 at the same time as Xbox Series X|S and PC.

For Singapore PS5 owners who grew up hearing about Halo but never had a reason to pick up an Xbox, this is the definitive entry point into one of gaming’s most celebrated storylines.

Halo: Campaign Evolved gameplay screenshot showing the Halo ringworld environment
Image courtesy of Xbox Game Studios

What’s New Beyond the Original Campaign

Halo: Campaign Evolved is more than a visual upgrade. Halo Studios expanded the game to 13 total missions — the original 10, plus three new pre-campaign missions that follow Sergeant Avery Johnson in the lead-up to the ring’s discovery. These additions fill in story beats that fans have wanted for years.

The arsenal is expanded too: nine weapons from across the broader Halo series are now available, including the Energy Sword, Battle Rifle, and Needle Rifle. Vehicle hijacking — a fan-favourite mechanic from later games — is implemented throughout. Dozens of Skulls return to toggle gameplay modifiers. Cinematics have been rebuilt with full motion capture and returning voice actors, and Martin O’Donnell’s iconic soundtrack has been remastered with rebuilt sound design.

Halo: Campaign Evolved Master Chief combat gameplay
Image courtesy of Xbox Game Studios

Co-op, Crossplay, and Game Pass

The game supports two-player split-screen co-op on consoles and up to four-player online co-op across all platforms. Full crossplay and shared progression mean a Singapore PS5 player can team up with friends on Xbox Series X|S or PC without any barriers. Progress carries over if you ever switch platforms.

Xbox Game Pass subscribers get Halo: Campaign Evolved on day one at no extra cost. The game is also coming to PC via Steam for those who prefer that platform.

Halo: Campaign Evolved four-player online co-op
Image courtesy of Xbox Game Studios

Singapore Editions and Launch Dates

Two editions are available to pre-order on the Singapore PlayStation Store now:

  • Standard Edition — S$79.90: The full 13-mission campaign plus the Foundry Armory pre-order cosmetic pack.
  • Premium Edition — S$109.90: Everything in Standard, with up to five days early access (from 24 July in Singapore), the Alpha Halo Armory Pack, and a Digital Story & Art Collection with lore content.

For most Singapore players, the Standard Edition at S$79.90 is solid value for a campaign that comfortably clears ten hours. The Premium Edition is the pick if you want to play the moment early access opens on 24 July, or if the bonus cosmetics and lore collection appeal. The full standard launch for Singapore follows on 29 July.

Stay across all the biggest game releases hitting Singapore as July 2026 shapes up to be one of the strongest months on recent record.

MARRIAGETOXIN Season 2 Confirmed for January 2027

MARRIAGETOXIN Season 2 is officially locked in for January 2027 — and the announcement arrived at the best possible moment: the instant Season 1’s final episode finished airing in Japan on 30 June 2026. Studio BONES Film’s breakout Spring anime returns for a second run, streaming on Crunchyroll globally, Singapore included.

The Show That Made Spring 2026 Worth Watching

If you slept on this one, the setup is deceptively simple: Hikaru Gero is heir to a family of poison masters and has zero interest in marriage — except that if he doesn’t find a bride and secure the bloodline, his younger sister gets forced into a political arrangement instead. His fix is to recruit Mei Kinosaki, a professional marriage swindler, to help him navigate the hunt. What unfolds is an action-comedy where both leads are competent at very different kinds of manipulation, and the chemistry earns the rom-com label.

The manga, written by Joumyaku and drawn by Mizuki Yoda, runs in Shueisha’s Shonen Jump+. BONES Film adapted it across 13 episodes covering three arcs — the Water Master, Sound Master and Beast Master storylines — directed by Motonobu Hori with Kohei Tokuoka handling character design and chief animation direction.

MARRIAGETOXIN official anime key art featuring Hikaru Gero, Mei Kinosaki and the full cast
Image courtesy of SHUEISHA / MARRIAGETOXIN Project
Season 2 Announcement PV — via バンダイナムコフィルムワークス チャンネル on YouTube

Season 2 — What the Creator Said

Story author Joumyaku shared a personal message with the Season 2 announcement, as published by Anime Corner. Floored by the news, the author wrote that they were “beyond grateful” — crediting the fans directly for making it happen. On what’s ahead: Season 2 will bring in, in Joumyaku’s own words, “charming and wildly unpredictable new characters” alongside the returning leads.

Joumyaku's official Season 2 announcement comment card from the MARRIAGETOXIN Project
Image courtesy of SHUEISHA / MARRIAGETOXIN Project

January 2027 gives the production roughly six months of runway from the Season 1 finale — a brisk but entirely workable turnaround for a Shonen Jump+ adaptation with an established team already in place.

What Made Season 1 Stand Out

Hikaru Gero in an intense emotional moment from MARRIAGETOXIN Season 1
Image courtesy of SHUEISHA / MARRIAGETOXIN Project

Season 1’s reputation rested on execution as much as premise. Series composition by Kimiko Ueno kept the pacing tight across all three arcs, and the score by Taisei Iwasaki and Yuma Yamaguchi gave each tonal shift — comedy to action to genuine stakes — its own texture. Opening theme Kill or Kiss by Yurina Hirate and ending Shake Na Baby by AKASAKI were well-matched to the show’s chaotic-romantic register.

Where Singapore Fans Can Watch

MARRIAGETOXIN streams on Crunchyroll with English subtitles and an English dub, fully available in Singapore and across Southeast Asia. Season 1’s 13 episodes are up now — plenty of time to catch up before January. For more anime and manga coverage, check our full archive.