Recreation launches on Might also 21 for PS5, PS4, Xbox X|S, Switch, PC via Steam
Stage 5 started streaming a 15-minute “Woodcutter Life” gameplay video for the Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time game on Tuesday.
The sport will launch on Might also 21 on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X|S, and PC via Steam.
The sport was as soon as initially slated for 2023, earlier than getting a delay to closing summer season, and then it was as soon as scheduled to launch on October 10, earlier than getting delayed indefinitely. It was as soon as previously slated for an April 2025 launch.
The sport takes dwelling on Mysteria Island. As in the previous titles, gamers design their fill avatars, and might fight, fetch, and craft. Lives, which are the in-game professions, include paladin, woodcutter, and cook dinner. Avid gamers can stoop back and forth between the past and most contemporary to unravel the mysteries of the island.
Nintendo launched the first Fantasy Life Nintendo 3DS game in North America in October 2014. The sport originally launched in Japan in 2012.
Stage 5 first published Fantasy Life Online as Fantasy Life 2: Futatsu no Tsuki to Kamisama no Mura (Fantasy Life 2 Twin Moons and the Sacred Village) in 2015, and the company held a closed beta in July 2016. Stage 5 then modified the title to Fantasy Life Online in October 2016, with a deliberate launch in 2016. Stage 5 then delayed the game a number of times earlier than releasing the game in July 2018. Boltrend Video games launched the game worldwide in December 2021. The sport ended service in Japan in December 2021. The sport ended worldwide service in February 2023.
Source: Stage 5‘s YouTube channel