'Rogue Trooper: Redux' Remastered, Death & Destruction Coming Again On Nu Earth; Coming To Nintendo Switch, Details Released Date & More
Rogue trooper third-person action was first dropped back in 2006. After 11 years of MIA, Rogue Trooper is now making its way back into Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, PC, and PlayStation 4.
Rebellion, the UK studio has announced recently that they will be rebooting its most popular 2000 AD comic strip. The game will be remastered as "Rogue Trooper: Redux" this year by TickTock Games for consoles and PCs, Kotaku has reported.
Meanwhile, back in April 2006, Rogue Trooper first released on Xbox, PC, and PlayStation 2 and a Nintendo version of Wii titled "Rogue Trooper: The Quartz Zone Massacre," in February 2009. The upcoming "Rogue Trooper: Redux" still features a soldier named Rogue, a blue-skinned Genetic Infantryman.
Rogue uses his dead comrades as a biochips to become one-unit squad of destruction and death on the battlefield of Nu Earth. Rebellion believed that Rogue Trooper is popular enough to make a remaster on some current-gen consoles. The developer stated that the original game was greatly known for bringing the cult sci-fi strip to life.
The game was tactical and authentic third person shooter, first ever debuted before the same genre becomes what it is today. Nintendo users are now very excited over the news and keen to see what the Nintendo Switch version of the game what is like. Nintendo is best known for tying the gap between hand devices and home consoles.
But Nintendo Switch's Joy-Con controllers on the device's side support motion control that further allows a different gameplay experience from Xbox-One, PlayStation 4, and PC versions of "Rogue Troopers: Redux. Somehow, TickTock Games can downgrade the game to adapt Switch's lower power, Nintendo Life has reported.
Though Rebellion didn't say anything particular about the "Rogue Trooper: Redux" release date yet. But the company didn't noted that the first 2000 AD-related will developed outside the company, and didn't allow other developers to make games with its IPs.
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