E3 2017 trailers for Ori and the Will of the Wisps, Super Lucky’s Tale & Sea of Thieves

Microsoft has released the E3 2017 trailers for Ori and the Will of the Wisps, Super Lucky’s Tale and Sea of Thieves. In Ori and the Will of the Wisps, players embark on an all new adventure to discover the mysteries beyond the forest of Nibel, uncover the hidden truths of those lost, and unravel Ori’s true destiny.

Super Lucky’s Tale is a a playground platformer in which players join Lucky, the ever-optimistic, energetic, and lovable hero on his quest to find his inner strength and help his beloved sister rescue the Book of Ages from Jinx.

Last but not least, Sea of Thieves is described as an immersive, shared-world adventure game filled with pirates, unexpected dangers and loot for the taking.

Enjoy!

Ori and the Will of the Wisps - E3 2017 - 4K Teaser Trailer

Super Lucky's Tale – E3 2017 – 4K Announce Video

Sea of Thieves - E3 2017 - 4K Gameplay Walkthrough

16 thoughts on “E3 2017 trailers for Ori and the Will of the Wisps, Super Lucky’s Tale & Sea of Thieves”

  1. Ori was presented as “Xbox One & Windows 10 Exclusive,” so probably no Steam version sadly. Too bad for the devs, I really liked the first one but no way I’m buying this if that’s the case.

    1. To be fair, that’s how Cuphead got announced at E3 and even then the devs just announced it’s coming to Steam on their Twitter so chances are this one will too.

      1. Ya, but we’ve known Cuphead’s coming to Steam for some time. Exclusives are one of the few times I how to hear sweet, sweet lies at E3.

      2. There is a big difference.

        Cuphead is created by independent developer
        Ori is created by internal MS first party studio

        After creating Windows 10 MS never released a single own game on third party store like Stean, Origin, Uplay. All games created by internal MS developers are released only in Windows Store

    2. Well, the first entry did make it to Steam in the end, even though that one also started off as an Xbox One exclusive, so I wouldn’t abandon all hope just yet.

      Microsoft doesn’t seem to own the IP, so it’s quite possible that the developers successfully negotiated a timed exclusive agreement, rather than an all-out exclusivity deal – especially considering how popular this game is on Steam;

      SteamSpy: Ori – Owners: 921,299 ± 28,902, Ori Definitive – Owners: 379,400 ± 18,560

        1. It’s right there in the picture, mate, first line;

          “Moon Studios is an independent video game development studio”

          Also;

          “In 2011, Moon Studios signed a development and distribution deal with Microsoft Game Studios for Ori and the Blind Forest, and became a Microsoft third-party developer.”

          “Moon Studios GmbH”

          “Type
          Private”

          “While the game is published by Microsoft Game Studios, the team remains wholly independent. If anything, the relationship has given them many of the benefits of a first party development while being able to maintain their unique structure, one seemingly poorly fit with the typical first party system. Describing the relationship on Reddit, Ori Programmer Willem Vos noted: “One of the cool things about Microsoft being involved in the process of building the game, was that they have an experienced and outsider vision.””

          Source: “GETTING TO KNOW MOON STUDIOS”
          March 16, 2015

          1. LOL … but NO. Go to website of Moon studios. Now this is a first party MS internal studio. We have 2017 not 2015 🙂

          2. I don’t give a f*ck about Gears, & I couldn’t care less about Forza in the face of the ridiculous amount of other racing IPs that already exist on Steam, but you already know that, as we went over this repeatedly last year.

            As for Ori; Moon Studios is still registered as Moon Studios GmbH. GmbH is what the Germans use in place of Ltd. in order to indicate privately owned companies. If they were no longer privately owned (ergo if they were now owned by Microsoft), then they’d no longer be a GmbH/Ltd.

            At best, Microsoft MIGHT own the Ori IP which is why they call themselves first party developers on their website bio, but there’s no indication of that, as I doubt Microsoft would have let Ori leave the Xbox & go onto Steam if they could have ever avoided it in the first place. Either way, they don’t own Moon Studios themselves.

  2. Is it just me or Super Lucky’s Tale is somehow reminiscent of mobile games? It looks like a knockoff of some bigger title. Characters try to convey happiness but they fail because of lackluster animations.

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