When we laid out every cover in Edge’s history for issue 300, even we were surprised to see the extent to which Japanese games, technology and people have dominated our attention over the years. Partly that’s because in recent times we’ve seen Japan’s place on videogaming’s worldwide stage diminish, and our expectations have lowered all round. Even the mighty Nintendo’s lustre feels a bit tarnished nowadays.
But Mega Man creator Keiji Inafune was wrong in 2009 when he said that Japan’s game industry was “finished”. It has shifted, but it’s been a process of fading, not crashing. Wii U limped out of the gate and never recovered, but PS4 emerged as a steamroller, crushing a Microsoft that suddenly looked completely unlike the company that had just bossed a console generation…
