In a continuation of Square Enix's promise to review its development processes «from scratch», the gaming giant best known for Final Fantasy announced it was expecting massive losses in a warning to investors yesterday.
"… in light of the myriad changes underway in the environment surrounding its Group," the statement reads, Square Enix plans to «revise the Group’s approach to the development of high-definition (HD) games with the intention of being more selective and focused in the allocation of development resources. As a result of a close examination of the Group’s development pipeline undertaken in keeping with this revised approach, the Company expects to recognize approximately ¥22.1 billion [approximately $140 million] in content abandonment losses on its books for the fiscal year ended March 2024.»
While the statement itself doesn't reveal exactly what «content» has been left out to dry, we can apply some thorough speculation to the matter. In January of this year, the company's new CEO Takashi Kiryu said he'd like to «ensure higher quality from each title by slimming down our lineup,» specifically calling out the development of «a wide variety of titles» as «splintering» Square Enix's resources.
As my fellow PC Gamer writer Wes Fenlon pointed out back then, the company's had a glut of not-so-great games that'd fit that particular bill in the past handful of years. Ranging from games that showed some form of potential like Marvel's Avengers and Forespoken to, uh, Balan Wonderworld, and whatever the hell Symbiogenesis is.
I've got my fingers crossed that Kiryu's finally dropped his bizarre fascination with AI and, dare I hope, NFTs—but I'm not crossing them that hard. Even if Square Enix keeps messing around with that stuff on the side, this $140 million write-off likely has more to do with its priorities for «high-definition» development and thinning out its slate of mid-budget games that are unlikely to deliver big returns. In early April the company
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