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Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, a remastered version of the 2017 motion role-playing game from Guerrilla Games that is predicted to introduce several recent gameplay features that bring it closer to its 2022 sequel Horizon Forbidden West, is just not the one remaster that PlayStation has up its sleeves, in response to recent rumors that suggest Sony will likely be hosting a brand new State of Play event as early as next week, one that may include a brand new, albeit “even less exciting” remaster that PlayStation and PC gamers may or is probably not occupied with. A rating summary for Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, which the ESRB published yesterday, has been taken down and isn’t any longer accessible on the rankings board’s website.
Jeff Grubb said:
- “[Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered] may very well be announced in that State of Play…that might be coming up on the twenty fourth, almost actually happening on the twenty fourth.”
- “…I don’t know what it’s, but once I was asking about this, there’s another remaster type of within the works that will likely be even less exciting…”
- “…[it’s] definitely not BloodBorne…State of Play…it’ll probably be announced there.”
The unique word from Grubb:
A rating summary for Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered reads:
That is an motion/role-playing game by which players assume the role of a hunter (Aloy) surviving through a post-apocalyptic world. Players guide Aloy as she learns to hunt robotic creatures and animals within the wild. Aloy uses arrows, spears, and explosive traps to injure and kill machines, boar, and occasional human enemies. Animals and humans emit small puffs of red blood when struck; one sequence depicts an abandoned camp with large blood stains on rocks and trees. The sport accommodates a transient reference to sexual material (e.g., “Eighteen months hard labor in exchange for thirty years lounging around Elysium watching porn?”). In text/audio files, characters sometimes reference fictional drugs, overdoses, and getting high: “…not even out of junior high and already a drug addict”; “…I ran across a pusher who was selling Razorwing for eight bucks a tab”; “I’d spend just a few days getting high, then OD on Overcast.” The word “sh*t” appears within the text/dialogue.