

- #BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER MOVIE#
- #BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER PATCH#
- #BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER LICENSE#
- #BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER SERIES#
The appearance of Harley Quinn shows that the game is still going to have some kind of connection to Batman, but it's almost impossible to say to what extent. With Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League still deep in development, it's hard to say how Rocksteady is going to pick up the Arkhamverse story. Doing the same with Batman might require some major narrative legwork by Rocksteady, but it could make for a great return to the series. The Arkham games have even provided a pretty good example of this, as when the Joker died in Arkham City, he still managed to return as a hallucination in Arkham Knight. Dramatic hero returns are part of what makes the comic book industry so exciting, and it wouldn't be much of stretch to think that the same could be done in a video game.
#BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER SERIES#
If there's one thing to keep fans of the Batman: Arkham series optimistic, it's the fact that when superheroes die in the comics, they don't really have a great track record of staying dead. RELATED: Batman Arkham: 10 Ways Bruce Wayne Changed Between Asylum & Knight It's hard to believe that such a lucrative and revolutionary series would just come to an end after so much success, and it begs the question of whether or not the Batman: Arkham games are really over. As popular as the series is however, there hasn't been a new Batman: Arkham game in six years at this point. The Batman: Arkham series managed to combine excellent gameplay with a compelling story, and it's served as the benchmark for a successful superhero game ever since Batman: Arkham Asylum released in 2009. Fortunately for comic fans, Rocksteady started a superhero game revolution when it began the Batman: Arkham series. The industry certainly didn't get like this overnight however, as it took the work of lots of developers to make sure superheroes got a fair shake. Gone are the days of Superman 64 and X-Men: Destiny, and now comic fans can actually look forward to upcoming games that tackle their favorite heroes.
#BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER MOVIE#
At this point, it's hard to imagine that comic book video games used to only be disappointing movie tie-ins. I never want to see another Riddler Trophy again.For the last few years, comic book fans have been spoiled with some pretty stellar video game adaptations. If it is, can the Riddler please eat my shorts? Whatever form Rocksteady's next game takes, if the Riddler's in, I'm out. With WB Montreal heading up a mainline Batman game, Rocksteady could be laying down foundation for a game that involves the entire Batman universe, if not the entire DC universe.
#BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER LICENSE#
The Batman license is too valuable for Rocksteady to leave alone, too, so I'm guessing we'll return, but not as The Dark Knight himself. WB Montréal hasn't put out any major games since Batman: Arkham Origins in 2013, unless you count 2014's Lego Legends of Chima Online, and it was generally well-received. Our friends at GamesRadar reported on some leaked messages from an alleged WB Games QA tester that claims the next game is called Batman: Arkham Crisis and that it's based on the Court of Owls comic arc. WB Montréal is rumored to be working on another Batman game, at least.

Is it another Arkham game? We don't know, but it's likely.

What we want to knowĬourt of Owls basically asks, what if Batman but The Illuminati?
#BATMAN ARKHAM KNIGHT GAME OVER PATCH#
I just have to imagine making those dense, detailed open world Gothams is too time-consuming and expensive to pin on a singleplayer game that depreciates in value (for devs and publishers) faster than something with a longer tail and a dedicated community of people complaining about the patch notes every week. I'm hoping Rocksteady stays with singleplayer, though I'm always down for some cooperative play in the mix. Someone's gonna be herding cats, putting on "live demonstrations of gameplay" during DeeJ-like streams, and gently delivering tragic nerf news. This could be the first beat of the drum. Getting behind the importance of 'community' is ubiquitous marketing language for most games these days, but especially so with living games like Destiny 2 or Fortnite. If I read into Sefton Hill's Reddit AMA, his desire to get the community "involved heavily" with Rocksteady's next could imply that it's working on a live service game of sorts, something like a Destiny 2 or Fortnite or Monster Hunter: World. We think it's going to be a live service game.
