Nagoshi Studio restores YouTube channel after brief deletion amid funding woes

Nagoshi Studio briefly deleted its YouTube channel on April 24, 2026, alarming fans amid ongoing funding troubles with NetEase, before restoring it the next day with no listed videos.

Fans of the Yakuza series spotted the deletion of Nagoshi Studio's YouTube channel on April 24, 2026, with social media posts on Reddit speculating that the studio—founded by Toshihiro Nagoshi post-Sega—might be shutting down. This panic was heightened by recent reports of NetEase halting funding for the studio's debut title, Gang of Dragon (see prior coverage in this series). Notably, the official trailer from The Game Awards 2025 was never on the channel and remained available elsewhere.

The channel, with a few hundred subscribers, featured only one unlisted video: a 1:21 music video 'MAKE/HUMAN' from November 2024, marking the studio's third anniversary. Nagoshi promoted it on Twitter (now X), saying it expressed the studio's identity and aspirations.

The channel was deleted on April 24 but restored by April 25 morning. The music video was accessible via direct link but not publicly listed. Neither Nagoshi Studio nor NetEase commented. While the restoration provides slight reassurance, the studio's future hinges on securing new funding after NetEase's withdrawal.

Labaran da ke da alaƙa

Illustration of Nagoshi Studio employees in shock amid office closure due to funding cut, with Gang of Dragon game art and rainy Tokyo backdrop.
Hoton da AI ya samar

NetEase halts funding for Toshihiro Nagoshi's Gang of Dragon, allows studio to continue independently

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI Hoton da AI ya samar

NetEase has notified Nagoshi Studio it will stop funding from May 2026 for its debut game Gang of Dragon, after the studio requested an additional ¥7 billion ($44.4 million) to complete the project unveiled at The Game Awards 2025. The studio may continue independently if it secures alternative funding and negotiates to buy back IP rights.

Skeleton Crew Studio, led by producer Jiro Ishii, is preparing legal action against Japanese crowdfunding platform Ubgoe. The platform withheld most funds from a successful campaign for the sequel to 2009 cult hit 428: Shibuya Scramble. Ubgoe claims it sent half the money to the wrong account.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

Content creator Nubzombie received two copyright strikes on a YouTube playthrough of Silent Hill 2 for featuring Akira Yamaoka's song 'Promise'. The claims originated from 'Agro memos' and '詹姆斯.K', whose tracks are AI-generated versions of the original. YouTube automatically sided with the claimants.

Josh Sobel, a former technical artist at Wildlight Entertainment, has reactivated his X account after deactivating it last month amid backlash from a post about Highguard's failure. He stands by the intent of his original comments but regrets the poor phrasing, attributing it to stress following the game's shutdown announcement. Highguard, a 3v3 live-service hero shooter, is set to go offline on March 12, 2026—45 days after its January 26 launch.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

The first trailer for the Japanese thriller 'Exit 8' has been unveiled, offering a preview of the film adaptation of the popular video game. Directed by Genki Kawamura, the movie stars Kazunari Ninomiya as a man trapped in an endless subway corridor seeking Exit 8. It is set for nationwide theatrical release on April 10.

Developers from the recently shuttered Dark Outlaw Games have revealed that their cancelled PlayStation project was not a live-service game, contrary to widespread assumptions. The studio, led by Call of Duty veteran Jason Blundell, was closed by Sony this week. The team attributes the cancellation to broader industry challenges rather than project quality.

Wannan shafin yana amfani da cookies

Muna amfani da cookies don nazari don inganta shafin mu. Karanta manufar sirri mu don ƙarin bayani.
Ƙi