Metro Book Writer Suggests New Game Is in Development
Metro writer Dmitry Glukhovsky has talked about the fate of the arrangement, saying he has no goal of keeping on composing the books yet proposing the account of Artyom could proceed outside of the books.
In a Reddit AMA, Glukhovsky was inquired as to whether he will "continue teaming up with 4A Games" subsequent to finishing his book arrangement. In spite of the fact that he didn't out and out affirm another amusement was underway, the tone of his reaction recommended there could be one later on.
"All the 'following amusement' questions must be asked [to] Deep Silver- - the distributer of the initial two Metro diversions ;)"
The site for the Metro 2035 novel already recommended 2017 would see the arrival of "the following Metro computer game." However, distributer Deep Silver later corrected the content, which now peruses, "Yet the Metro adventure doesn't end where the books abandon us ... A period of awesome disclosures lies ahead!"
It additionally distributed an official articulation on Facebook scattering the gossipy tidbits that another Metro title would dispatch in 2017.
"You may have seen a few destinations have reported that another Metro diversion would be discharged in 2017 ... As the selective rights holder to computer games set in the Metro 2033 universe, Deep Silver has aggressive arrangements for the tremendously fruitful Metro arrangement. Be that as it may, just to deal with our fans' desires - discharging the following Metro amusement in 2017 is not one of them. When we have more news to share, we will."
Later in his AMA, Glukhovsky by and by demonstrated the universe of Metro could keep on expanding outside the novelisations.
"Furthermore, regardless of the possibility that there won't be whatever other Metro BOOKS, this doesn't really imply that Artyom's story can't proceed in other media," he clarified.
The last amusement in the arrangement to be discharged was Metro: Last Light, which was granted a 9/10 in GameSpot's survey.
"Metro: Last Light is not a perpetual torrent of projectiles and monsters. It requires the investment to give you a chance to take in the stifling air and permit the chilling haze to saturate your bones," said pundit Kevin VanOrd. "What's more, when it at last comes time to point your shotgun at changed savages, the result is more stupendous for the spooky hush that preceded.
"Last Light is eminently better than its ancestor, blending narrating, shooting, and sneaking into a noteworthy and durable entirety. What's more, through this congruity of amusement configuration comes the acidic cacophony of a world so torn in two that a solitary probability can carry with it unending trust."
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