Sony isn’t ready to wheel out 60fps Bloodborne just yet, but it is prepared to help Dark Souls and Elden Ring dev's parent company pump out 9,000 original IPs by 2027

Bloodborne
(Image credit: Sony)

Elden Ring and Bloodborne developer 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:FromSoftware's parent company Kadokawa has a bursting portfolio of video games, anime, and manga. And now that Sony's become the p🍬ublisher's largest shareholde🐭r – a deal struck in 2024 – Kadok💟awa is plannꦜing on stretching that portfolio even wider with a boatload of new manga IPs.

The company's president Takeshi Natsuno, , tells Japanese newspaper that Kadokawa hopes to grind out 9,000 original publications by 2027. It previously aimed to reach the (in comparison) more modest goal of 7,000 manga and light nꦰovel releases, but now Natsuno says Kadokawa will be able to 🌳crush that objective in 2025.

Sony wants to become an IP emperor, too. While announcing its increased stake in Kadokawa back in December, that both it and Kadokawa want "to maximize both companies' IP value" by doing things like planning live-action film adaptations, producing anime, and expanding Kadokawa's 🌜gಞame publishing.

"By combining Kadokawa's extensive🃏 IP and IP creation ecosystem with the strengths of Sony," Sony president Hiroki Totoki explains in a statement, "which has promoted the global expansion of 🧸a wide range of entertainment, including anime and games, we plan to work closely together to [...] [maximize] the value of its IP, and Sony's long-term vision, 'Creative Entertainment Vision.'"

This Vision sees all except, apparently, the Bloodborne 60fps patch that fans have spent years fac🐓edown on their hands and knees begging for. It's not the same, but at least we'll get 9,000 volumes of shonen and stuff as a consolation prize. I guess.

Bloodborne isn't getting a remaster because FromSoftware's Miyazaki is "so busy" and "doesn't want anyone else to touch it," theorizes PlayStation veteran Shuhei Yoshida.

Ashley is a Senior W🌟riter at GamesRadar+. She's been a staff writer at Kotaku and Inverse, too, a🦩nd she's written freelance pieces about horror and women in games for sites like Rolling Stone, Vulture, IGN, and Polygon. When she's not covering gaming news, she's usually working on expanding her doll collection while watching Saw movies one through 11.