doesn't have an officially confirmed sequel in the works, but there are many assumptions that one will be developed given the game’s success. In the event of a sequel being created, there's no shortage of potential for new plots and settings in the massive universe of. Plus, the canon book events already include the perfect set-up for a sequel.
While Voldemort provides a plotline that spans across the full series, each book also has a self-contained plot that's resolved by the story's end, but also plays into the overarching Voldemort plotline. Even without Voldemort's presence, one book in the series has the perfect set-up that can be implemented in the past before the books, or in the future after they take place. As such, it'd be a shame if a sequel to failed to include this event.
In, Dumbledore gives an explanation of the Triwizard Tournament and how it was designed as a friendly competition among the three nearby schools – Hogwarts, Beauxbatons, and Durmstrang – while also helping the wizards of the next generation form ties with each other. During this explanation, he also mentions that thefirst tournament took place about seven hundred years ago. Because the Triwizard Tournament was established so long ago, could make use of the event even if it's set in the past again.
Having the sequel set in the past and including the Triwizard Tournament brings with it unique challenges and opportunities for events that are different from those in the tournament featured in the books. Specifically, a tournament in the past had a much higher death toll, as Dumbledore mentions in his speech that it ended up being discontinued for a while because students were regularly being killed while competing. So, if it is used in a game that's set in the past, then the challenges could be far more dangerous than those that were in the book.
While the Triwizard Tournament itself is enough to be the centerpiece of a sequel, it doesn't have to be the entirety of the main plot. In,
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