El presidente de Capcom atribuye el éxito reciente al trabajo en equipo

El presidente de Capcom, Haruhiro Tsujimoto, ha atribuido la reciente racha de juegos exitosos de la editorial a un cambio en el modelo de desarrollo, pasando de depender de individuos a centrarse en el trabajo en equipo.

En una entrevista con Famitsu durante las celebraciones del 43.º aniversario de Capcom, Tsujimoto explicó que la compañía dejó de depender de creadores individuales para sus franquicias. Señaló que las series solían quedar vinculadas a las ideas de un solo desarrollador, lo que limitaba las entregas futuras.

La editorial reconstruyó los títulos desde cero tras conversaciones con figuras clave de cada franquicia. Tsujimoto afirmó que el cambio fue aceptado incluso si esto conllevaba caídas temporales en las ventas.

Capcom enfrentó desafíos en la primera mitad de la década de 2010, incluyendo lanzamientos complicados como Street Fighter V y críticas a Resident Evil 6. El punto de inflexión llegó con Resident Evil 7 en 2017, seguido de títulos como Monster Hunter Wilds, Dragon’s Dogma 2 y Street Fighter 6.

Artículos relacionados

Realistic illustration of Resident Evil heroes Leon, Chris, and Jill with Capcom's announcement banner celebrating Requiem's sales and character retention.
Imagen generada por IA

Capcom plans to retain Resident Evil veterans like Leon

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

Resident Evil Requiem director Koshi Nakanishi and producer Masato Kumazawa stated that Capcom has no plans to retire iconic characters such as Leon S. Kennedy, Chris Redfield, and Jill Valentine. In a post-mortem interview, they emphasized the enduring appeal of these mainstays. The game, celebrating the series' 30th anniversary, has sold over 7 million copies in two months.

Capcom has outlined its approach to generative AI, focusing on routine tasks while keeping core creativity in human hands.

Reportado por IA

Former PlayStation executive Shuhei Yoshida defended Sony's approach of delayed PC releases for major titles, expressing doubt about day-and-date launches and stating no evidence of a strategy change—comments coming after a Bloomberg report on halted single-player ports.

Shuhei Yoshida, former president of Sony Computer Entertainment Worldwide Studios, revealed at Australia's 2026 ALT: Games festival that Jim Ryan fired him in 2019 for refusing to follow orders. Yoshida described the dismissal lightheartedly, noting Ryan wanted him out of first-party development because he did not listen. He stayed with Sony in an indie support role until retiring in 2025.

Reportado por IA

Capcom has stated it will not include AI-generated materials in its game content, as revealed in an investor briefing on March 23, 2026. The company plans to use AI tools to improve efficiency in development processes like graphics, sound, and programming. This comes amid backlash over Nvidia's DLSS 5 implementation in Resident Evil Requiem.

Kohei Ikeda, director of Tekken 8, announced his departure from Bandai Namco on June 1 after two decades with the company. His exit follows the departures of other senior Tekken developers in recent months.

Reportado por IA

Strauss Zelnick, chief executive of Take-Two Interactive, stated that creating massive hits like Grand Theft Auto has become increasingly difficult. He spoke during a conference appearance on May 27.

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar