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Below are the latest Nintendo products that can be currently pre-ordered at retailers:

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Rune Factory 5 has technically been around for a year, but only in Japan. But just this week, the game made its debut in North America and Europe thanks to the localization efforts of XSEED.

John Wheeler, Lori Snyder, and Katherine Sargent are some of the key people behind Rune Factory 5’s English version as they contributed to the project as the localization manager, assistant localization manager, and localization editor respectively. Recently, we were able to catch up with them to talk more about their work. You can read our full discussion below for insight into the localization of Rune Factory 5.

Earlier this week, Agent Intercept joined the Switch eShop, and we now have gameplay. We’ve got a total of 24 minutes of footage.

For more on Agent Intercept, read the following overview:

Tempest 4000 landed on Switch this week, and we now have gameplay. A new video shows off 18 minutes of footage.

Below is some information about Tempest 4000:

Publisher Rogue Games and developer Playfellow Studios recently released a 2.0 update for Fisti-Fluffs, their feline fighter for Switch.

Plenty of new content is included. The team has added new moves, powerups, stages, outfits, improved graphics, and more.

Gameplay has come in for Thunder Kid: Hunt for the Robot Emperor, a 3D run ‘n’ gun action game. Eastasiasoft and Renegade Sector Games released it this past week.

For more on Thunder Kid, read the following overview:

Hatsune Miku Jigsaw Puzzle ended up on Switch this week, and we have a good chunk of gameplay. 47 minutes of footage is now available.

If you’re interested in learning more about Hatsune Miku Jigsaw Puzzle, check out the following overview:

Listings on the eShops provide file sizes for a bunch of Switch games. These include Sherlock Holmes: The Devil’s Daughter, Crystar, Gotta Protectors: Cart of Darkness, and more.

Here’s the full roundup:

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Square Enix is no stranger to unconventional game names, and that tradition has continued with their HD-2D titles on Switch – those being Octopath Traveler and Triangle Strategy. In a recent interview, producer Tomoya Asano shared some insight into the team’s thinking.

Asano told Inversus that Square Enix considers “if the player can imagine what kind of game it is based on the title.” With Triangle Strategy, you play it from three angles and it’s a strategic experience. Square Enix initially included “Project” so that there would be “a little bit of room to be able to change the name”. Since it was well-received by fans, the “Triangle Strategy” name stuck.

Asano’s full words: 

With more and more companies around the world from a variety of backgrounds, philosophies, and talents merging and being bought up, making sure content offerings are plentiful while still remaining strategically available and accessible is becoming more and more important. Since 2020, the pandemic has completely changed the way we consume media on just about every platform and device available, whether it’s your Kindle, smart TV, mobile device, Xbox, or just about anything that has a screen on it these days. Formerly closed and proprietary devices such as Xbox, for example, have gone on to create their own Xbox Game Pass subscription service that has been wildly successful, seeing millions of active users and subscribers each month not only on Xbox devices, but allowing games available on the service to be played outside of the console as well. The Xbox experience has become more accessible than ever, and it’s through this strategy that is allowing Microsoft to pave the way forward for innovation within games distribution and consumption without borders.

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