Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Level-5 is making an MMO-sized game set in the ‘modern day’

Add as a preferred source on Google

Level-5, the studio responsible for the Professor Layton franchise and Ni no Kuni series, turns 20 this year. In celebration of that milestone, the studio is gearing up for a reveal of new property, a game of MMO-sized proportions.

In 4Gamer’s interview series “Harada Kills,” Bandai Namco producer Katsuhiro Harada spoke with Level-5 president and CEO Akihiro Hino, who dropped a hint about the studio’s next project (via Gematsu).

Recommended Videos

“We do have an idea. I’m not sure if we can call it an MMORPG or not, but we’re planning to make a big title on the same scale as one. Also, since we’re going into our 20th year, we want to make something we like. If we able to get support from talented people able to do things we can’t, then I think we’ll be able to make it. By the way, the game we’re preparing won’t be fantasy but rather modern day,” Hino said.

The most interesting nugget here is the “modern day” reference. In terms of RPGs, Level-5 is most well-known for Yo-Kai Watch and the aforementioned Ni no Kuni, both of which use an interesting blend of folklore and fantasy to tell their stories. By the sounds of it, the unannounced project will hue closer to realism.

Level-5 previously tried to make an MMO-style game. Hino mentioned True Fantasy Live Online in the interview. That project was in development for the original Xbox in the early 2000s, but saw cancellation in 2004.

Even though Level-5 plans to reveal its latest game in its 20th anniversary year, the game won’t launch in 2018. Hino likened the reveal to Ni no Kuni: Dominion of the Dark Djinn, a Japanese exclusive Nintendo DS game that Level-5 announced for its 10th anniversary in 2008. Dominion of the Dark Djinn released two years later in 2010.

Level-5’s most recent game, Ni no Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom, launched just last week to mostly stellar reviews. In the months ahead, the studio will bring multiple mobile games to market in Japan, including a pair of Yo-Kai games and Fantasy Life Online. The unannounced MMO-sized game would appear to be the only major platform game Level-5 currently has on its plate.

Steven Petite
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Steven is a writer from Northeast Ohio currently based in Louisiana. He writes about video games and books, and consumes…
As Steam Deck fires up handheld costs, Acer Nitro Blaze Link limits you to stream at just $180
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Gaming handhelds have become surprisingly expensive. Between premium models like the Steam Deck, ASUS ROG Ally, and Lenovo Legion Go, getting a portable gaming machine often means spending hundreds of dollars before you’ve even bought a game.

Acer’s latest idea takes a very different approach. Announced alongside a flood of new products, the Nitro Blaze Link is a handheld gaming device that doesn’t actually run games itself. Instead, it streams them from a compatible gaming laptop, turning your Predator or Nitro notebook into a personal gaming server. If that sounds familiar, that’s because the concept isn’t entirely new. Tools like Steam Link, Moonlight, and Parsec have been doing similar things for years. What Acer is betting on is convenience.

Read more
MSI’s Triple Mode OLED monitor is a Computex showstopper and my eyes genuinely can’t wait for it
MSI's Triple Mode OLED raises the bar for gaming monitors at Computex 2026.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Dual-mode gaming monitors have been around long enough that the novelty has worn off. MSI has decided that two modes simply aren't enough and has unveiled the MPG OLED 322URDX36 ahead of Computex 2026.

It is the world's first Triple Mode gaming monitor, and if the execution is as good as it sounds, it could be one of the few gaming monitors that I’d be genuinely interested in. 

Read more
PS4 and Xbox One players are getting booted from Call of Duty: Warzone soon
Existing PS4 and Xbox One players can access Warzone until Black Ops 7 Season 06 ends
Call of Duty video game

Call of Duty players on previous-generation consoles can’t seem to catch a break. First, Activision announced that the next Call of Duty, which we now know is Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4, will not be released on PS4 and Xbox One. Now, the company is also taking Call of Duty: Warzone away from both older consoles.

The publisher has confirmed that Warzone support on PS4 and Xbox One will be reduced in stages before ending later this year. The first step begins on June 4, when Warzone will be removed from the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One digital storefronts. After that, new downloads will no longer be available on either platform.

Read more