Bandai Namco has taken the Tekken formula to another ... crush strength and one that immediately cancels any attack you land into a new combo that otherwise wouldn’t be possible.
This is a game that sees you doing battle in tanks, warships, and planes/helicopters, on land, sea ... to get a grasp of the game first. Bandai Namco did a great job improving on Tekken 7 to ...
Following the massive layoffs across the games industry Bandai Namco is now the latest to be affected, as it has cancelled various projects, impacting its staffing. Bandai Namco is also the first ...
Please verify your email address. Bandai Namco is reducing its workforce and canceling several upcoming titles due to low demand. Over 100 employees have left so far, with another 100 potentially ...
Bandai Namco joins a number of game industry companies that have begun canceling games and firing staff in recent months. In a report by Bloomberg, Bandai Namco has begun to fire 200 of its 1,300 ...
“Several” Bandai Namco Entertainment games have been canceled and the company’s staff is being reduced, according to a new report. Bloomberg claims that Bandai Namco is encouraging staff to ...
The report claims that Bandai Namco has moved "about 200" of its around 1,300 employees to such rooms - known in Japan as "oidashi beya, or 'expulsion rooms'" - so far, with "nearly 100" having ...
Bandai Namco is reportedly cutting its Japanese workforce and cancelling a number of projects due to lacklustre demand. The news comes as the company reports huge sales of its latest anime game ...
Dragon Ball: Sparking! Zero's first wave of DLC will see Daima's Vegeta Mini and Glorio join the anime arena fighter's massive roster. Today at New York Comic Con, Toei Animation celebrated Dragon ...
Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that Bandai Namco Holdings has halted or canceled development on a number of unannounced games, including an unannounced title which Nintendo commissioned ...
Since April, Bandai Namco Studios Inc., an affiliate of the company, has relocated approximately 200 out of its 1,300 employees to so-called “expulsion rooms," or oidashi beya, added the report.