Shinji Mikami is one of the greatest developers that games have so far seen. He spent his early years at Capcom and, among many other games, created the Resident Evil series, returning to direct the standout Resident Evil 4, before becoming a key member of the legendary Clover Studio. He and others left Capcom to co-found PlatinumGames, with Mikami always of the mind that he would direct one major title at the company and help it get established, before leaving to set up on his own. Mikami directed the outstanding Vanquish, before founding Tango Gameworks later in the same year.
There's a thread running through Mikami's career of training up the next generation. Among his notable proteges over the years have been Hideki Kamiya, Shu Takumi, John Johanas, and Ikumi Nakamura. Mikami's goal with Tango Gameworks was to direct an initial title, The Evil Within, before moving to a supervisory role and letting the studio's younger talent take the reins (which in the case of The Evil Within 2 resulted in one of the best action-horror games ever made). Mikami left the studio in February 2023, two years after its parent company Zenimax was acquired by Microsoft Game Studios, and shortly after the surprise release of Hi-Fi Rush.
Yesterday Microsoft announced the brutal closure of four of its studios, among which was Tango Gameworks. Over its 14 years Tango developed The Evil Within and its sequel, Ghostwire: Tokyo, a mobile title for the Asian market called Hero Dice, and Hi-Fi Rush (which a Microsoft exec called "a break out hit for us"). One game every three years isn't bad going at this level, and Tango also made unusual games, the kind of thing that gets a load of 7 and 8/10s but some people will swear is the game of the year. The decision just seems baffling, an archetypal bean-counter moment, and it has committed the cardinal sin of disrespecting Shinji Mikami.
Barring a documentary a few years ago, Mikami tends to keep himself to himself, and this pronouncement isn't
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