Jeez, you just can't escape Final Fantasy XV director Hajime Tabata, can you? The likeable project lead seems to be everywhere these days, including PAX West. Indeed, Tabata will be part of a panel that's being livestreamed later today, in which the developer will dish out new information on the upcoming role-playing release. Oh, and there are apparently going to be surprises, too.
The livestream starts at 10:30PM BST / 17:30PM ET / 14:30PM PT, and will supposedly last around an hour. Will you be tuning in? Grab your bros and join us in the comments section below.
Comments 8
I think I've already completed final fantasy 15 without picking up a pad.
After watching Kingsglaive I've been getting more and more amped for FFXV. Bring on the neeewwwsss!
"Surprises" No more delays would be a nice one. Announce a NX release date and a Noctis amiibo, that would be funny.
Why does PS go to the trouble of converting times into ET and PT but putting it into military time which probably half the US can't read anyway? And to make matters worse BST isn't it military time so they don't even match up properly. Why isn't BST 22:30? Weird.
"Surprise! Another Delaaaaayyyyyy~"
@rjejr what's military time? Do you mean the 24 hour clock? ie) 2pm = 14:00.
Military time to me is being somewhere 5 minutes before so 2pm = 13:55. Also I cant remember if what method we used to calculate the time at sea, wherever international time, GMT etc. Man I have completely forgotten and will look it up.
@themcnoisy Yes, non-military people in the US usually refer to that as military time. And we use it as often to tell time as we use the metric system to measure stuff.
Did this happen 2 hours ago? Did anybody watch it? No articles, no comments, nuthin.
Are we doing a live chat Wednesday at 3:00PM ET? Should be something to talk about then.
@rjejr This happened on the 3rd of September lol. They explained how the game will become more linear in the 3rd act and revealed that FFXV takes place across a 10-year timeline. It's weird but a lot of gaming sites passed on this news to talk about....nothing.
Btw, actual military time uses no colon punctuation and is followed by a designated timezone (R, J, Z). We use the 24-hour clock ("your" clock, which is really from ancient Egypt anyway) for much more, like medical, navigation, and emergency services.
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