Following its multiple delays, we now know when the next South Park RPG is (maybe) coming out.
Ubisoft has announced that South Park: The Fractured but Whole, the follow-up to 2014 RPG The Stick of Truth, will arrive before the end of its next fiscal year. That means the game, based on the popular Comedy Central show and developed in collaboration with creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, is now pegged for release sometime before March 31st, 2018.
The Fractured but Whole was first announced for release on December 9th, 2016, alongside jokes from Parker and Stone that the game would not suffer from the same rolling delays that plagued the first game. That date was later pushed back to the first quarter of 2017, before Ubisoft announced a second delay back in February.
The sequel keeps the 2D art style and retro-inspired, turn-based combat of the first game intact, but ditches its fantasy-inspired story for one inspired by modern superhero movies.
South Park: The Fractured but Whole will arrive before spring 2018 on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. That is, it must be said, barring any further delays.
Via EGM
Ubisoft has announced that South Park: The Fractured but Whole, the follow-up to 2014 RPG The Stick of Truth, will arrive before the end of its next fiscal year. That means the game, based on the popular Comedy Central show and developed in collaboration with creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, is now pegged for release sometime before March 31st, 2018.
The Fractured but Whole was first announced for release on December 9th, 2016, alongside jokes from Parker and Stone that the game would not suffer from the same rolling delays that plagued the first game. That date was later pushed back to the first quarter of 2017, before Ubisoft announced a second delay back in February.
The sequel keeps the 2D art style and retro-inspired, turn-based combat of the first game intact, but ditches its fantasy-inspired story for one inspired by modern superhero movies.
South Park: The Fractured but Whole will arrive before spring 2018 on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. That is, it must be said, barring any further delays.
Via EGM

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