Alan Wake Returns to Remedy, Paving the Way for a Sequel

Alan Wake has gone home. Sooner today, the publishing rights to the 2010 cult-deary Xbox 360 repugnance stake/Stephen King-simulator reverted from Microsoft back to Remedy Entertainment, the game's archetype developer. Along with Alan Heat, Remediation acquired 2.5 billion euros in royalties for past games.

The news comes two years subsequently Remedy's split from Microsoft. The partnership adage the European nation studio develop ii Xbox exclusives in Alan Wake and Quantum Break, an ambitious gunslinger attached to an original Television show made by Microsoft that flopped atomic number 3 hard as the bet on. Remedy has since focused on creating multi-platform games suchlike its upcoming title Control, and according to Eurogamer, Remedy is contemplating a possible Alan Wake port, rerelease, operating room remaster earlier deciding whether Beaver State not to greenlight a subsequence.

"The only thing we want to clarify, now that Remedy owns the publishing rights, is that we could bring Alan Wake to different platforms that we choose," a Remedy spokesperson told Eurogamer. "We have nothing to announce for now. We are fully focused on Control releasing on [August 27]."

The opening of an AW left is intriguing. I enjoyed the game even with Alan's overbearing narration, the punch-drunk flashlight armed combat, and those tension erasing in-halting Verizon Wireless commercials. If ported to PS4 operating theater Switch, the quirky horror title featuring a flash narrator, flashlight combat, and in-game Verizon Radio receiver commercials might find an even wider interview. That rerelease could give Remedy justification to rouse Mr. Wake for a proper Alan Wake 2.