Category Archives: News

Grand Blue Dreaming Season 3 Arrives 6 July — Official Main PV Drops Today

The lazy, dive-mad degenerates are back — and this time they’re getting on a plane. Grand Blue Dreaming Season 3 has a confirmed premiere date of 6 July 2026, and the official main PV from the NBCUniversal Anime/Music channel dropped today with the full ending theme reveal.

TVアニメ「ぐらんぶる」Season 3 本PV — via NBCUniversal Anime/Music on YouTube

Official Main PV — Ending Theme Revealed

The new PV is the first proper full-cut trailer for Season 3, and it confirms what fans have been waiting to hear: the ending theme is “Hadaka no Mermaid” (裸のマーメイド) performed by MAMESHiBA NO TAiGUN, with comedy legend and actor Kuro-chan on production duties. The song suits the summer beach-trip energy perfectly.

The opening theme “Natsuko” by FUNKY MONKEY BΛBY’S — first announced on 24 May — is also previewed in the new PV, and it hits exactly the same nostalgic summer-pop note you’d want from a show about college students living in swim trunks.

Grand Blue Dreaming Season 3 key visual featuring Iori, Kohei and the gang
Image courtesy of Grand Blue Dreaming / Kodansha

The Gang Goes to Palau

Season 3 takes Iori Kitahara and company overseas for the first time in the series — the story is set in Palau, the Pacific island nation famous for its crystal-clear diving waters and marine biodiversity. It’s a huge change of scenery from the Izu Coast, and the PV leans hard into the tropical vibe: turquoise water, sunlit reefs, and the gang looking adequately underprepared for international travel.

Production continues at studios ZERO-G and Liber under returning director Shinji Takamatsu, with character design by Hideoki Kusama and music by Yukari Hashimoto. The creative core from Seasons 1 and 2 is intact, which should reassure fans who loved the show’s comedic rhythm.

Cast: Old Faces and New

The returning core is all present: Yuma Uchida as Iori, Ryohei Kimura as Kohei, and Chika Anzai as Chisa. New to Season 3 are some strong additions — Sayaka Ohara (the great Erza Scarlet, Beatrice from Re:ZERO) plays Sayaka Kotegawa, Asami Seto voices the Chief of the Palau dive shop Dolphin, Aya Suzaki voices Maki, and M·A·O (Iris from Fire Force) joins as Carina.

Advance Screening and Broadcast Schedule

Before the TV premiere, an advance screening of Episode 1 will be held on 19 June 2026 at 6:00 PM JST at Shinjuku Baltic 9 in Tokyo. The regular broadcast begins 6 July 2026 on TOKYO MX and BS11, airing Mondays at 24:00 JST (which is technically 12:00 AM Tuesday morning in Japan).

Where to Watch in Singapore

Crunchyroll carried both Season 1 (2018) and Season 2 (2025) for Singapore and Southeast Asia, and while Crunchyroll SEA streaming for Season 3 has not been officially confirmed at time of writing, it would be a significant surprise if they didn’t simulcast it given the track record. Keep an eye on the News section — we’ll update when streaming details land.

Last words

Grand Blue Dreaming occupies a rare spot in the anime world: it’s a pure comedy that gets genuinely funnier with each rewatch, and the manga — over 10 million copies worldwide — has been building toward the Palau arc for years. For Singapore fans who’ve followed the series on Crunchyroll, July 6 is a date to mark. The main PV is out now on YouTube if you want to experience the Palau colours yourself before the season kicks off.

MAPPA 15th Anniversary: JJK, Chainsaw Man & AoT News on 19 June

If you’ve been waiting for Jujutsu Kaisen Season 4 news, a Chainsaw Man update, or any hint of what’s next for Attack on Titan — set an alarm for Friday, 19 June. Studio MAPPA is hosting a landmark 15th anniversary presentation at 8pm JST / 7pm SGT, and almost every major franchise it handles is on the bill.

MAPPA at 15: A Studio Behind Half Your Favourite Anime

MAPPA was founded on 14 June 2011 and has since become one of the most prolific animation studios in the world — responsible for Jujutsu Kaisen, Chainsaw Man, Attack on Titan: The Final Season, Dorohedoro, Ranma ½, Yuri on Ice, and more. To mark its 15th anniversary, the studio is hosting a special video presentation that it describes as more than a list of upcoming projects: each title will be introduced through “carefully crafted video segments” (per navigator Kenjiro Tsuda’s comments).

The event will also premiere an original anniversary film set to “Seikatsu” (Life), a song written for the occasion by Japanese band PEOPLE 1. Veteran voice actress Kotono Mitsuishi serves as narrator.

MAPPA 15th anniversary lineup titles
Image courtesy of MAPPA

Jujutsu Kaisen Season 4 — What Singapore Fans Need to Know

Jujutsu Kaisen Season 4 — covering the Culling Game Arc Part 2 — is confirmed in production, and MAPPA will share fresh details on 19 June. The event includes a dedicated “Juju Talk” segment featuring voice actors Junya Enoki (Yuji Itadori) and Megumi Ogata (Yuta Okkotsu).

Season 3 finished airing earlier this year, covering the Culling Game Arc Part 1, so Season 4 is the natural continuation of the story. The June 19 update is expected to include at minimum a new teaser and possibly a confirmed premiere window.

Chainsaw Man: International Assassins Arc and a Mystery New Project

The Chainsaw Man section of the event is arguably the most intriguing. Two announcements are confirmed:

  • New details on the Chainsaw Man: International Assassins Arc anime — the adaptation of the manga arc immediately following the Public Safety arc. Whether this will be a new TV season or an animated film has not been confirmed.
  • A brand-new Chainsaw Man project, teased independently of the Assassins Arc announcement. Chainsaw Man Part 2 of the manga concluded in Japan just one day before this was announced, making the timing significant. Creator Tatsuki Fujimoto has spoken publicly about his love for cinema, so speculation has already settled on an original anime film — but nothing is confirmed until 19 June.

Attack on Titan, Dorohedoro, Ranma ½ and More

The full MAPPA 15th anniversary lineup is:

  • Attack on Titan: The Final Season — new anime details (separate from the Attack on Titan 3 game announced earlier this month)
  • Dorohedoro Season 3
  • Ranma ½ Season 3 (streaming on Netflix in Singapore)
  • Oblivion Battery Season 2
  • Yuri on Ice 10th Anniversary content
  • A completely new, unannounced anime — one reveal MAPPA is keeping under wraps until the night itself

The breadth of this lineup makes the June 19 presentation one of the most consequential anime events of the year, rivalling a dedicated Crunchyroll Expo panel in terms of raw fan interest.

How to Watch Live from Singapore

The presentation streams free on MAPPA’s official YouTube channel:

  • When: Friday, 19 June 2026 at 7pm SGT (8pm JST / 1pm CEST)
  • Where: youtube.com/@MAPPACHANNEL
  • Cost: Free — no registration required

Set a reminder on YouTube now so you do not miss the start. Each segment is expected to carry its own teaser or trailer, so this is one to watch in real time rather than catch up on later.

Last words

MAPPA’s output is woven through Singapore’s anime scene — JJK merch is a fixture at events like AFA and CSF, Chainsaw Man cosplay turns heads at every convention, and Ranma ½’s return has been a nostalgia wave for older fans. Friday’s livestream will shape what Singapore anime fans are talking about for the rest of 2026. Block out 7pm SGT, pull up YouTube, and enjoy the chaos.

Blue Lock Season 3: Neo Egoist League Premieres October 2026

Blue Lock’s third season now has an official title — and it’s the one manga readers have been waiting for. On 9 June 2026 (Japan’s self-declared “Blue Lock Day”), production studio Eight Bit and the BLUE LOCK Production Committee confirmed the new series title as BLUE LOCK: NEO EGOIST LEAGUE. A super teaser visual featuring Yoichi Isagi and Michael Kaiser dropped alongside the announcement, with the show targeting an October 2026 premiere on Crunchyroll.

What Is the Neo Egoist League Arc?

The Neo Egoist League — known in Japanese as 新英雄大戦 (Shin Eiyū Taisen, roughly “New Hero Wars”) — is the longest arc the Blue Lock manga has run, spanning over 150 chapters. After Japan’s U-20 squad is dismantled in the previous arc, the surviving Blue Lock strikers don’t go home — they’re scattered across Europe’s top five football leagues instead.

The setup is ruthless: 35 Japanese strikers, each embedded in a European club, compete in a round-robin tournament against each other and the world’s elite. Only the top 23 scorers earn a spot on Japan’s U-20 World Cup squad. It’s Blue Lock logic pushed to a global scale, with an entirely new roster of overseas rivals — many of them, according to illustrator Yusuke Nomura, “even more eccentric than the Blue Lock members themselves.”

Mangaka Muneyuki Kaneshiro put it plainly on Blue Lock Day: “Both Isagi and we are starting fresh from here. We’ll be going all out with ego.”

Isagi vs. Kaiser: The Rivalry at the Centre

Yoichi Isagi character visual for Blue Lock NEO EGOIST LEAGUE
Image courtesy of BLUE LOCK Production Committee

The teaser visual released on Blue Lock Day frames Season 3 as Isagi’s story versus one man: Michael Kaiser, ace forward of Bastard München and the dominant presence throughout this arc. Yoichi Isagi returns voiced by Kazuki Ura, while Kaiser is played by Mamoru Miyano — familiar to Singapore anime fans as Light Yagami in Death Note and Ling Yao in Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. Miyano brings exactly the kind of operatic ego the role demands.

Michael Kaiser character visual for Blue Lock NEO EGOIST LEAGUE
Image courtesy of BLUE LOCK Production Committee

Eight Bit — the same studio behind Seasons 1 and 2 — handles animation for Season 3. The extended production window since Season 2 ended is notable; the studio has had more runway this time around, which matters for a story arc this dense.

The Live-Action Film Is Also Coming

Announced alongside Season 3: a Blue Lock live-action film, produced by CREDEUS (the studio behind the Kingdom and Golden Kamuy films) and targeting Summer 2026 in Japan, timed to coincide with the FIFA World Cup. No Singapore theatrical date has been announced. We’ll update this post if a local run is confirmed through Odex or another distributor.

When Can Singapore Fans Watch Blue Lock Season 3?

Crunchyroll has confirmed it as the international streaming home for BLUE LOCK: NEO EGOIST LEAGUE, consistent with Seasons 1 and 2. Blue Lock has streamed in Singapore on Crunchyroll for both prior seasons, and Season 3 is expected to continue that pattern.

The premiere window is October 2026. A specific date of October 9 has circulated widely in fan media, but as of the Blue Lock Day announcement, no official date has been confirmed — treat that figure as a placeholder until Eight Bit or Crunchyroll publish an official air date.

For more upcoming anime on Crunchyroll this season, check out our Manga & Anime coverage.

Last Words

Blue Lock is one of the biggest sports anime of the past few years, and the Neo Egoist League is the arc manga readers have been clamouring to see animated. With Eight Bit back in the chair, Mamoru Miyano voicing the most arrogant rival in the series, and a 150-chapter arc to work through, October 2026 is shaping up to be a strong season for Singapore’s Crunchyroll crowd. We’re watching.

Kingdom Hearts IV Revealed: Switch 2 Launch Title, First Gameplay After 4 Years

After four years of radio silence, Square Enix just reminded everyone that Kingdom Hearts IV actually exists — and it’s coming to Nintendo Switch 2 as a launch title alongside PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S and PC.

KINGDOM HEARTS IV – Teaser Trailer | June 2026 — via Square Enix Asia on YouTube

Kingdom Hearts IV is confirmed — Switch 2 launch title across all major platforms

Square Enix dropped a new trailer for Kingdom Hearts IV at Nintendo Direct on 9 June 2026, finally breaking a silence that had stretched back to the original 2022 tease. The game will arrive day-one on Nintendo Switch 2, with simultaneous launches on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC via Steam and the Epic Games Store. No specific release date has been given yet, but the multi-platform simultaneous release signals that Square Enix is treating Switch 2 as a full equal launch platform — not an afterthought port.

Built on Unreal Engine 5, the new trailer is the first time we have seen real extended gameplay. The jump in visual fidelity from Kingdom Hearts III is immediately striking: Sora moves through sun-drenched city streets with a weight and fluidity the series has never had before.

Kingdom Hearts IV Sora in Quadratum gameplay screenshot
Image courtesy of Square Enix

Sora is still lost in Quadratum — and the stakes are bigger

Picking up after Kingdom Hearts III and Melody of Memory, Kingdom Hearts IV begins the so-called Lost Master Arc. Sora finds himself stranded in Quadratum, a hyper-realistic city inspired by Tokyo — specifically a fictionalised Shibuya and Minami-Aoyama. Donald and Goofy are searching for him from the other side of reality, while Sora navigates a world where the usual rules of light and darkness don’t apply.

The premise is the inverse of everything the series has done before: the people of Quadratum believe Sora’s world is fictional, and those in Sora’s world believe Quadratum is fiction. That conceptual twist opens up storytelling space that Kingdom Hearts has never explored, and the new trailer teased both Young Xehanort and a character strongly resembling Luxord as players in whatever scheme is unfolding.

New gameplay mechanics — build system, parkour, grappling Keyblade

The action looks unmistakably Kingdom Hearts, but sharper. Confirmed new additions include:

  • Scrap and build mechanic — first shown in detail here, letting Sora dismantle and reconstruct elements of the environment mid-fight
  • Keyblade grappling hook — Sora can launch the Keyblade to traverse large vertical distances, turning the city’s architecture into a playground
  • Parkour traversal — running across building facades and leaping between platforms is seamlessly integrated into both exploration and combat
  • Reaction commands return — a fan-favourite system from Kingdom Hearts II makes its comeback, unlocking doors mid-air and chaining into combo finishers
Kingdom Hearts IV combat and traversal in Quadratum
Image courtesy of Square Enix

Can’t wait? The Kingdom Hearts Collection [I–III] lands October 8

For those who want to catch up before KHIV drops, Square Enix also confirmed the Kingdom Hearts Collection [I–III] for Nintendo Switch 2, PS5, Xbox Series X|S and PC on 8 October 2026. Pre-orders opened on 9 June. The collection is native software (not cloud streaming) and bundles:

  • Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5+2.5 ReMIX (KH1, Chain of Memories, Days, KHII, Birth by Sleep, Coded)
  • Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue (Dream Drop Distance, Back Cover, 0.2)
  • Kingdom Hearts III + Re Mind DLC

A free demo for Kingdom Hearts III on Switch 2 — covering the Olympus and Toy Box worlds — is already available to download now.

Last words

For Singapore players who have been holding out hope since the 2022 tease, this Nintendo Direct was the confirmation we needed. Kingdom Hearts IV is real, it is coming to every major platform simultaneously (including Switch 2 from day one), and the first extended gameplay is genuinely exciting. The release date remains unannounced, but with the Kingdom Hearts 25th anniversary landing in March 2027, keep that calendar clear.

In the meantime, the October 8 collection is a perfect reason to replay the whole saga — or start it for the first time. Check out our latest game news for everything else that dropped at the June Nintendo Direct.

GARRACK x EVANGELION Raden Watches — Pre-Orders Open 12 June

Japan-made watchmaker GARRACK is bringing Neon Genesis Evangelion to your wrist — and the dial work alone makes this worth your attention. Three automatic mechanical watches inspired by Unit-01, Unit-02, and Unit-00 go on pre-order 12 June 2026, with sales opening 26 June 2026. International shipping is available, so Singapore fans can order direct.

GARRACK x EVANGELION raden watch collection featuring all three EVA units
Image courtesy of GARRACK / Ueni Trading

What Is the GARRACK EVANGELION Raden Watch Collection?

GARRACK is a Japanese character-collaboration watch brand distributed by Ueni Trading. Their speciality is pairing popular IP with traditional Japanese crafts — and for Evangelion they have gone with raden (螺鈿), the ancient technique of inlaying iridescent abalone shell onto lacquerwork.

Each dial is hand-finished by a fourth-generation raden artisan in Takaoka, Toyama Prefecture — one of Japan’s most respected lacquerware regions. Because natural shell is used and every piece is applied by hand, no two watches are identical. The iridescent surface shifts colour with the angle of light, so the watch is never quite the same twice in different lighting.

Three EVANGELION Units, Three Distinct Dials

The collection covers the three lead Evangelion units, each with its unit designation at a unique index position on the dial:

  • Unit-01 (Ref. SMS-EVA-41-1) — ¥77,000 tax-included (approx. SGD 640)
  • Unit-02 (Ref. SMS-EVA-41-2) — ¥79,200 tax-included (approx. SGD 660)
  • Unit-00 (Ref. SMS-EVA-41-0) — ¥79,200 tax-included (approx. SGD 660)

The Unit-01 numeral sits at the 1 o’clock position, Unit-02 at 2 o’clock, and Unit-00 at 12 o’clock. A.T. Field-inspired indices run around each dial, and the see-through case back carries the NERV emblem — a detail that lands especially well in person.

GARRACK EVANGELION Unit-01 raden watch close-up showing handcrafted mother-of-pearl dial
Image courtesy of GARRACK / Ueni Trading

GARRACK EVANGELION Watch Specs

  • Movement: Automatic (MIYOTA)
  • Case: Stainless steel, 41 mm
  • Strap: Calf leather
  • Crystal: Mineral glass
  • Water resistance: 5 ATM
  • Caseback: See-through with NERV logo
GARRACK EVANGELION Unit-02 raden watch close-up
Image courtesy of GARRACK / Ueni Trading

How to Pre-Order from Singapore

GARRACK’s official feature page at WorldWideWatch.jp ships internationally, so Singapore fans can order direct and pay in Japanese yen. Pre-orders open 12 June 2026 and the watches officially go on sale 26 June 2026 (Friday). The collection is also available via the Evangelion Store, Rakuten, and Yahoo Shopping Japan if you prefer a proxy-shopping route.

SGD prices above are approximate at the time of writing — check a currency converter before you order.

Last Words

This is the kind of collab you won’t find at any local counter — a Japan-craft collector watch tied to a franchise that still hits hard here. Evangelion is in its 30th-anniversary year, and appetite for quality EVA merchandise among Singapore fans has never been higher. If you have been hunting for an EVA piece that doubles as a proper automatic watch, this is a strong contender. Pre-orders open in two days — bookmark the page now and check our merch coverage for more picks worth your wallet.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time remake screenshot for Nintendo Switch 2

Zelda: Ocarina of Time Remake Coming to Nintendo Switch 2

Nintendo saved its biggest card for last night: a full remake of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time is coming to Nintendo Switch 2 in 2026, confirmed at the June 9 Nintendo Direct that aired at 10pm SGT.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time – Nintendo Direct 6.9.2026 — via Nintendo of America on YouTube

What Nintendo Announced at the June 2026 Direct

The June 9 Direct was packed — Deltarune Chapter 5, Kingdom Hearts IV, Splatoon Raiders, Xenoblade Genesis — but nothing landed harder than the final reveal. A short teaser trailer confirmed that Ocarina of Time, the 1998 Nintendo 64 masterpiece that defined 3D gaming, is being brought back as a full remake exclusive to Nintendo Switch 2. Nintendo’s official description calls it “reborn” on Switch 2, with the game targeting a 2026 launch window.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time remake reveal screenshot for Nintendo Switch 2
Image courtesy of Nintendo

Full Remake, Not a Remaster — What That Means

Nintendo is calling this a remake, not a remaster or a port. That’s a meaningful distinction: where a remaster upscales what’s already there, a remake rebuilds the game from scratch with modern assets and technology. This is the same approach Nintendo took with The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening on Switch — a beloved classic reimagined with a completely new visual style. We don’t yet know who’s developing it or what engine it runs on; Nintendo has promised more information later this year.

The teaser trailer was brief — a glimpse of young Link lying in what appears to be the Kokiri Forest — but the implication is clear: this is a ground-up recreation for Switch 2 hardware, not the 3DS version rescaled to 4K. The last remake of Ocarina of Time was for Nintendo 3DS in 2011, fifteen years ago.

Nintendo Direct June 2026 promotional banner
Image courtesy of Nintendo

Why This Is a Big Deal for Singapore Switch 2 Owners

Ocarina of Time is one of the highest-rated games ever made, and it introduced an entire generation of players — including many Singapore gamers who grew up in the late 1990s and early 2000s — to 3D adventure gaming. Many of us remember a borrowed N64 cartridge, a GameCube disc, or the 3DS download. A Switch 2 remake gives that experience to a brand-new audience while giving veterans a reason to revisit Hyrule on the biggest screen in the house.

It’s also worth noting the broader Zelda momentum: a live-action Zelda film is confirmed for April 30, 2027, and the franchise is celebrating its 40th anniversary. The timing of this remake is no accident. If Nintendo lands a firm release date in the coming months, this could be the holiday system-seller for Switch 2 in Singapore.

The game is Switch 2 exclusive — it will not come to the original Switch — so this is one more reason to make that upgrade if you haven’t already. Switch 2 is currently available at major Singapore retailers.

Other Highlights From Last Night’s Direct

While the OoT remake was the headline, the rest of the Direct was equally stacked. Deltarune Chapter 5 arrives as a free update on June 24 for both Switch and Switch 2 — Toby Fox also teased Chapter 6. Kingdom Hearts IV was shown in new gameplay footage and confirmed as a Switch 2 launch title. Splatoon Raiders, a single-player spinoff featuring Deep Cut, drops July 23. And Xenoblade Genesis — a brand-new entry in the series — was announced for 2027. It was a dense, generous Direct, and we’ll have more coverage of individual announcements in the coming days. Browse our latest gaming news for more.

Last words

A full remake of arguably the greatest action-adventure game ever made, exclusive to a console Singapore gamers are already snapping up — this is precisely the kind of announcement that moves hardware. Nintendo hasn’t given a specific release date yet, just “2026”, so keep an eye on future Nintendo Directs for the full reveal. We’ll cover it the moment it drops.

Final Fantasy Resonance: First HD-2D Final Fantasy Hits Oct 22

Square Enix has pulled off a genuine surprise: Final Fantasy Resonance is the very first Final Fantasy game built in the gorgeous HD-2D art style — and it’s landing on basically every platform that matters on 22 October 2026. Revealed during the 9 June Nintendo Direct (right alongside a fresh Kingdom Hearts IV trailer), it’s a turn-based, crystal-and-chocobo love letter to the series’ roots, and it’s coming to Switch 2, Switch, PS5, Xbox Series X|S and PC.

FINAL FANTASY RESONANCE – Announce Trailer — via FINAL FANTASY on YouTube

The first Final Fantasy in HD-2D

If you’ve played Octopath Traveler, Triangle Strategy or the Dragon Quest III remake, you already know the look: lovingly detailed pixel sprites layered over 3D environments, dramatic depth-of-field and sweeping camera angles. Square Enix has used HD-2D to revive plenty of classics, but Final Fantasy Resonance marks the first time the main brand itself wears the style. The result, on the evidence of the reveal trailer, is exactly the nostalgia hit long-time fans have been begging for — pixel chocobos, towering espers and airships rendered with serious cinematic flair.

Final Fantasy Resonance HD-2D key art

Image courtesy of Square Enix

A Brave Exvius story, rebuilt for consoles

Here’s the twist long-time fans will want to know: Final Fantasy Resonance is based on the first story arc of Final Fantasy Brave Exvius, the 2016 mobile gacha RPG. Square Enix is keen to stress this is far more than a port — the publisher says the season-one storyline has been “extensively rebuilt” as a full-fledged, console-quality RPG, with voiced characters, new cutscenes and a freshly recorded soundtrack.

The adventure returns to the world of Lapis, following the Grandshelt knight Rain, his adoptive brother Lasswell and the mysterious maiden Fina as they race to stop Veritas of the Dark from corrupting the world’s crystals. It’s a self-contained slice of the Brave Exvius saga, so newcomers don’t need to have touched the mobile game to jump in.

Final Fantasy Resonance turn-based battle screenshot

Image courtesy of Square Enix

Turn-based combat and the Visions system

Combat is unapologetically classic turn-based, with a modern twist. You’ll exploit enemy weaknesses to stagger foes and chain into cinematic “Resonance” attacks — a tactical layer that rewards reading each encounter rather than mashing through it.

The real fan-service hook is the Visions system, which lets you recruit “echoes” of beloved Final Fantasy heroes as party members. The reveal confirmed cameos from across the series, including Cloud, Tidus, the Warrior of Light, Terra and Clive, with each Vision bringing its own skills for party customisation. There’s plenty to chew on beyond the main story, too: the trailer and store listings tease run-ins with the wandering swordsman Gilgamesh, a Colosseum, a Chamber of Arms and showdowns with the Ultima Weapon.

On the audio side, the score comes from Elements Garden — the team led by Noriyasu Agematsu — with 33 newly recorded tracks joining music carried over from Brave Exvius.

Final Fantasy Resonance HD-2D world exploration screenshot

Image courtesy of Square Enix

Release date, platforms and editions

Final Fantasy Resonance launches on 22 October 2026 across Nintendo Switch 2, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S and PC (via Steam and the Microsoft Store). The line-up:

  • Standard Edition — US$49.99
  • Digital Deluxe Edition — US$59.99 (adds digital bonuses)
  • Collector’s Edition — US$209.99, bundling the base game, the Digital Deluxe bonuses and four physical collectibles: an acrylic block set of pixel-art characters, summons and bosses; a 120-page hardcover art book; a 120-track soundtrack CD; and an exclusive Final Fantasy Trading Card Game promo card.

Square Enix hasn’t published Singapore dollar pricing yet, but the US$49.99 base price works out to roughly S$65 at current rates — keep an eye on local retailers and the eShop/PlayStation Store closer to launch for confirmed SGD figures.

What this means for Singapore gamers

This one is squarely aimed at the JRPG faithful — and Singapore has plenty. A brand-new, story-complete Final Fantasy at a friendly US$49.99 (well below the S$90-plus you’ll pay for a typical AAA release) makes Final Fantasy Resonance an easy recommendation, especially for Switch 2 owners hunting for a meaty turn-based RPG to sink the year-end holidays into. The cross-platform launch means you can grab it wherever you already game, and the HD-2D presentation should look fantastic in handheld mode.

Collectors will be eyeing that US$209.99 Collector’s Edition, though import shipping and the weak conversion will sting — we’d watch for a local distributor before committing. As always, GameTrader will keep tracking SGD pricing, pre-order bonuses and trade-in values as 22 October draws closer. In the meantime, check out our coverage of the latest gaming news and reviews.

Final Fantasy VII Revelation: Every New Detail So Far

The wait for the finale is almost over. Final Fantasy VII Revelation — the third and final chapter of Square Enix’s Remake trilogy — is locked in for a worldwide launch in Spring 2027, and director Naoki Hamaguchi has been peeling back the curtain on what to expect. Between the Summer Game Fest reveal and a deep-dive interview with Japanese outlet Denfaminicogamer, we now have a much clearer picture of how Cloud and company close out 30 years of FF7 storytelling. Here’s everything new we’ve learned.

FINAL FANTASY VII REVELATION — Reveal Trailer, via FINAL FANTASY on YouTube

What is Final Fantasy VII Revelation?

Revelation is the conclusion to the trilogy that began with 2020’s Final Fantasy VII Remake and continued with 2024’s Rebirth. Hamaguchi explained that the “Revelation” title is meant to signal that “things previously concealed are being revealed” — a direct nod to the questions and theories the first two games left dangling. After Remake and Rebirth teased an altered timeline, this is the entry that’s supposed to pay it all off.

Encouragingly for anyone burned by long FF7 waits, Hamaguchi says the game is already fully playable from start to finish and now sits in its final balancing phase. He claims to have personally played through the whole thing around 40 times — a good sign the Spring 2027 window is solid rather than aspirational.

A colossal Weapon rises from the sea beside an industrial platform in Final Fantasy VII Revelation
Image courtesy of Square Enix

The Highwind and a world without boundaries

The headline feature is freedom. The iconic airship Highwind is obtainable early in the game, and instead of touching down at fixed landing spots, players drop in anywhere via parachute, seamlessly transitioning from sky to ground. You can fast-travel back up to the Highwind or return to on-foot exploration at will, and the ship’s interior even updates dynamically as the story progresses.

Every region from Rebirth returns, but the landscape has been reshaped — the awakening Weapons have caused geological upheaval, so familiar areas now look and play differently. Hamaguchi describes the design as an “ultra side-quest” structure: you can reach a lot of the map early, but the wildly varying difficulty of each area nudges you toward your own non-linear path rather than a single critical line.

Meet Pico, your one and only Chocobo

Rather than the stable of region-specific Chocobos from Rebirth, Revelation gives you a single companion bird named Pico that grows alongside you across the adventure. As Pico develops, it unlocks flight and gliding, opening up vertical exploration and letting you finally reach locations that were inaccessible earlier in the game. It’s a clever way to gate the open world without walling it off entirely.

Party members face off against a towering plant-like creature in Final Fantasy VII Revelation
Image courtesy of Square Enix

New playable characters and the “Ware” system

Two long-requested party members are confirmed playable:

  • Vincent Valentine finally enters the rotation, complete with a “Beast Mode” transformation you can toggle with a single button press mid-battle.
  • Cid Highwind joins as an attacker who specialises in aerial combat — fitting for the trilogy’s most airship-obsessed character.

Underpinning the combat is a new “Ware” system, which lets you customise each character’s role by swapping equipment, reshaping how they play. Notably, all Ware types unlock at once, so you’re encouraged to experiment and diversify your party builds from the off rather than grinding to slowly open options.

Final Fantasy 7 Revelation — Gameplay Overview Trailer, via IGN on YouTube

Story: choices that actually matter

Hamaguchi is leaning hard into the “weight of choice.” Player decisions reportedly determine which storylines unlock and which events play out — and they can even shift how you perceive individual characters. The main story still follows a set sequence, but the side content around it stays flexible.

A few story threads got specific attention: the previously underdeveloped Wutai storyline is being expanded, character relationships now reach beyond the usual Cloud-centric pairings, and Zack is said to play an important role in illustrating just how different this world has become from the 1997 original. As for the cast, Critical Role’s Matthew Mercer returns as the English voice of Vincent, with Travis Willingham confirmed as Sephiroth for the finale.

Sweeping vista of the reshaped world in Final Fantasy VII Revelation
Image courtesy of Square Enix

Platforms and release

Revelation launches simultaneously worldwide in Spring 2027 across PS5, Nintendo Switch 2, Xbox Series X|S, and PC (Steam, Epic Games Store and Xbox on PC). It’s the first mainline entry in the Remake trilogy to skip a PS5 timed exclusivity window and arrive everywhere at once — including, for the first time, on a Nintendo platform via the Switch 2, with the Switch 2 version receiving further optimisation closer to launch.

What this means for Singapore gamers

The day-one multiplatform launch is the big win here. No more watching the rest of the trilogy land on PS5 first — Singapore players on Switch 2, Xbox Series X|S or PC get to start the finale on the same day as everyone else in Spring 2027. SGD pricing and pre-order editions haven’t been announced yet, but expect details to firm up through late 2026.

If you’re planning to dive into the finale, now’s the time to make sure your back catalogue is sorted — whether that’s picking up Remake and Rebirth or trading in titles you’re done with to fund the upgrade. Drop by GameTrader to buy, sell or trade your games and consoles, and keep an eye on our news page as more Revelation details (and that all-important price) drop ahead of launch.

Five Singapore Games to Watch From SEAGS 2026

Five Singapore studios took the global stage at the Southeast Asian Games Showcase 2026 this past weekend — and their projects cover everything from a romance visual novel set right here in Singapore to a monster brawler with cendol and you tiao on the menu. If you missed the showcase, here’s your Singapore-focused rundown.

[OFFICIAL PREMIERE] Southeast Asian Games Showcase 2026 (SEAGS) — via SEA Games Showcase (SEAGS) on YouTube

Singapore Game Developers at the Southeast Asian Games Showcase 2026

Now in its second year, the Southeast Asian Games Showcase (SEAGS) is a premium annual online showcase for developers from Southeast Asia and the diaspora. The 2026 edition aired on 6 June as part of Summer Game Fest, streaming live on the official SEAGS YouTube and Twitch channels and simultaneously on The Game Awards YouTube channel. A total of 35 games from studios across the region were featured — five of them from Singapore.

The Five Singapore Games From SEAGS 2026

Merry Crisis (Monsoon Games) — A Visual Novel Set in Singapore

Monsoon Games’ Merry Crisis is the most locally resonant of the five. It is a romance visual novel about returning to Singapore for Christmas after a difficult breakup, navigating a charged reunion with a first love, an unexpected visit from a recent ex, and a new connection with a musician next door. By New Year’s Eve, you have to choose: the life you built abroad, or home.

The game is set between Singapore and New York, and the Singapore sequences draw on local settings and family dynamics. Players can customise gender identity and relationship type (straight or queer), with the story adapting to each choice. Merry Crisis promises over 12 hours of gameplay and is targeting Q4 2026 on PC, with a free extended demo already live on Steam.

Merry Crisis key art — Singapore route — Monsoon Games
Image courtesy of Monsoon Games

HellHeart Breaker (BattleBrew Productions) — Singapore on the Menu

BattleBrew Productions — the Singapore studio behind cooking RPG Cusineer — showed off their next project: HellHeart Breaker. The action game takes players to the Kappa Market, a supernatural food court where the specialities include cendol, you tiao, and durian mango sago. If a game has ever felt more unmistakably Singaporean in its DNA, we haven’t played it. HellHeart Breaker is targeting Q2 2027.

Hoa 2 (Skrollcat Studio) — The Ghibli-Esque Sequel Goes 3D

Skrollcat Studio’s original Hoa built a loyal following with its hand-painted art direction and meditative puzzle-platformer gameplay, drawing frequent comparisons to Studio Ghibli. Hoa 2 preserves that visual identity — the lush hand-painted aesthetic and gentle tone are still front and centre — but makes the move to full 3D environments. No firm release date was given at SEAGS 2026; the studio confirmed it is “coming soon.”

Hoa 2 screenshot — Skrollcat Studio's 3D sequel to the acclaimed puzzle platformer
Image courtesy of Skrollcat Studio

13Z: The Zodiac Trials (Mixed Realms) — Claim the 13th Position

Mixed Realms opened their 13Z: The Zodiac Trials reveal trailer with the line “12 walked this path before” — a nod to the Chinese zodiac as players compete to earn the elusive 13th zodiac spot. Details are still thin, but the trailer suggests an action title with mythological stakes. Mixed Realms is targeting Q4 2026.

Growing My Manhole (SylverDev) — Eat the Universe

SylverDev’s Growing My Manhole is a Q3 2026 roguelike built around progressive upgrades — specifically, consuming more and more of the universe. Unusual premise, potentially very satisfying loop. One to keep an eye on for fans of scale-climbing and incremental games.

The Wider SEAGS 2026 Lineup Is Worth a Watch Too

Beyond Singapore’s five entries, the full showcase was packed. Malaysian studio Metronomik showed a new story trailer for No Straight Roads 2. Passion Republic Games confirmed a 9 July release for the GigaBash: Ultraman Zero DLC. Filipino studio Polychroma Games unveiled Until Then: Afterimages, a DLC expansion for their acclaimed narrative adventure, releasing 18 June. Indonesian and Thai studios rounded out the bill with a strong mix of horror, cosy games, and brawlers.

The full showcase video — all 35 games — is on the SEA Games Showcase YouTube channel.

Last Words

Five Singapore studios on the same global stage at once is a meaningful moment for the local game development scene. From the deeply personal homecoming story of Merry Crisis to the local-food-fuelled spectacle of HellHeart Breaker, Singapore’s developers are making games with a clear sense of place. Keep these studios bookmarked — Q3 and Q4 2026 are shaping up to be busy.

Stay up to date with the latest in Singapore gaming via our Game News coverage on GameTrader.SG.