We still don't have Bloodborne on PC yet, but who needs it? We've got something even better on the way: Bloodborne Kart, a PlayStation-style demake that somehow evolved from a seeming April Fool's gag into a fully-fledged kart racing game. It was intended to be out on January 31, but developer Lilith Walther said today that the team needs to tap the brakes so they can ditch the Bloodborne branding at Sony's request.
Bloodborne Kart was announced in August 2022 and it gave us immediate high hopes. Walther was one of the creators of the excellent BloodbornePSX demake, for one thing, and that set the bar pretty high on its own. But the mere concept of Bloodborne Kart is inherently interesting—I mean, «What if Bloodborne, but kart racing?» is something you have to be at least a little curious about.
And it's not just some five-minutes-and-finished novelty game: Bloodborne Kart promises 12 racers, 16 maps, a «full singleplayer campaign mode,» split-screen local multiplayer, a versus battle mode, and—I have no idea how this is going to work, but there it is—boss fights.
The good news is that Sony isn't looking to kill the project outright, but it does want it cleaned up a bit for the lawyers.
«Sony contacted me,» Walther tweeted today. «Long story short I need to scrub the branding off of what was previously known as Bloodborne Kart, which we will do. But that requires a short delay. Don't worry, the game is still coming out! It'll just look slightly different.»
Walther doesn't seem too bothered by the development, saying the developers expected it to happen anyway, «so we're shifting gears to take care of it.» There's also clearly some excitement about moving away from the Bloodborne branding a little, and making it a full-on new thing.
«As much as I pushed for this to be 'the meme made real' so to speak, turning this into an original game that we have full creative control over is kind of exciting,» they tweeted. «This is a fan game no more!»
A new release date for the
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