Level-5: Difference between revisions
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==Development in the late 2000s== | ==Development in the late 2000s== | ||
Level-5 had at least eleven titles in development, seven for the [[Nintendo DS]], two for the {{PlayStation Portable}}, and two for at-the time | Level-5 had at least eleven titles in development, seven for the [[Nintendo DS]], two for the {{PlayStation Portable}}, and two for at-the time unannounced consoles. It announced a new ''Professor Layton'' trilogy taking place before the events of ''Professor Layton and the Curious Village'', of which the first game ''[[Wikipedia:Professor Layton and the Last Specter|Professor Layton and the Last Specter]]'' was released in 2009. Level-5 was also the producer of a movie based on the ''Professor Layton'' series called ''[[Wikipedia:Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva|Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva]]''. It continued to collaborate with [[Square Enix]] on {{DQ9}}, the first mainline entry the series has seen exclusively on a handheld, which released in July 2009. ''[[Wikipedia:Inazuma Eleven 2|Inazuma Eleven 2]]'' is the peculiar [[Wikipedia:soccer|soccer]] RPG which combines unique stylus driven soccer action with the RPG pedigree Level-5 is known for, and was be similar to its predecessor. As for the PlayStation Portable, it released ''Ushiro'' a horror-RPG where you take the role of a spirit, and ''Cardboard War Machine'' a more kids-oriented game where you build your own in-game robot. In May 2008, Akihiro Hino also announced Level 5's first self-published console game, ''Inazuma Eleven Break!'', which was eventually cancelled. | ||
==Dragon Quest Games== | ==Dragon Quest Games== | ||