Shinji Mikami, the esteemed director of iconic games like Resident Evil (1996) and The Evil Within, has finally opened up regarding his decision to leave Tango Gameworks, the company he founded. Given Tango Gameworks' recent rise to fame with the release of the critically-acclaimed game Hi-Fi Rush, Mikami's sudden departure from the studio was seen as surprising by many, but fans now have a proper explanation from the famed developer himself.
Shinji Mikami established his own independent studio, Tango Gameworks, in 2010, after working at companies like Capcom and PlatinumGames for several years. Only a few months after the company was founded, however, it was bought up by Bethesda parent company ZeniMax Media after undergoing major financial troubles. Nonetheless, Mikami worked at Tango Gameworks for over a decade, developing hit survival horror titles like The Evil Within 1 and 2, all the way to action games like Ghostwire: Tokyo and Hi-Fi Rush. After Microsoft's acquisition of Bethesda and Tango Gameworks was finalized in 2022, Mikami left the studio he founded about a year or so later, leading speculation to run rampant as to why the Resident Evil creator resigned from the company. But now, thanks to new information from Mikami himself, it seems like all the questions surrounding his departure can be put to rest.
According to a recent interview uploaded to the YouTube channel of Japanese game developer Byking, Shinji Mikami revealed that he actually wanted to leave Tango Gameworks eight years before he eventually did. As translated by Automaton, Mikami noted that he «had only been CEO [at Tango] for 6 months» before it was eventually acquired by ZeniMax. Although it seemed like he was the representative of the company from the outside looking in, Mikami likened his position at Tango as one more akin to that of «a rank-and-file employee» rather than a higher-up. «I had '___ producer' attached to my name, but I wasn’t an executive or anything of the sort.» Although
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