The first game to feel truly cinematic is back - years after its creator left
Briefly

Metal Gear is one of the best-selling video game series, shifting more than 60 million copies and pioneering cinematics through cutscenes, voice acting and dynamic camera angles. The series tackled complex themes such as nuclear disarmament and child soldiers, posed philosophical questions, and balanced seriousness with offbeat humour. Games frequently broke the fourth wall and required players to solve puzzles in unconventional ways, including physical box clues. Creator Hideo Kojima left Konami in an acrimonious 2015 split amid rising development costs for Metal Gear Solid V. A decade later, Konami released Metal Gear Solid Delta, a remake of the third game.
The series' significant place in gaming history meant fans were stunned when its creator Hideo Kojima quit game publisher Konami in an acrimonious split in 2015. One of gaming's biggest titles was left directionless - and there's been no game in the best-selling series since. But now, a decade later, Konami has released a remake of the third game in the series: Metal Gear Solid Delta.
"The impact Metal Gear has had on game-making makes it one of the most heralded entertainment franchises in the world, and made Hideo Kojima one of the industry's most famous creators," industry expert Christopher Dring told the BBC. With such success, you might think it was a match made in heaven, but there were issues bubbling under the surface. While
Read at www.bbc.com
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