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Metaphor: ReFantazio [a] is a 2024 role-playing video game developed by Studio Zero and published by Atlus in Japan and Sega worldwide. Metaphor: ReFantazio was first announced under the codename Project Re:Fantasy in December 2016, with no further information revealed until 2023, and was released for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on October 11, 2024.
Cover art of Metaphor: ReFantazio, depicting various characters. Metaphor: ReFantazio is a 2024 role-playing video game by Atlus, set in a fictional fantasy world.It centers on a protagonist who sets out on a quest to save a prince from a curse by defeating an aspirant for the throne called Louis Guiabern, accompanied by several allies from different tribes.
Metaphor: ReFantazio: Multiplayer / Online Helldivers 2 — Special Award Special Award — Game Changer Hall of Fame Lifetime Achievement Ambassador Award Lifetime Achievement TBA Street Fighter 6: Amir Satvat Ted Price: Don James
Yuichi Nakamura (中村 悠一, Nakamura Yūichi, born February 20, 1980) is a Japanese voice actor and narrator. He is affiliated with the agency Intention as of October 1, 2020. [3]
The forest is largely uninhabitable, being a saturated "hotspot" of unpredictable wild magic induced genetic mutations and dangerous legendary creatures, and is regarded by ponies as the most hostile region within Equestria's borders. In Frozen 2, the Enchanted Forest is home to spirits of fire, earth, wind and water. Elsa journeys there to ...
The Forests of Silence is a fantasy novel written by Australian author Emily Rodda, and is the first book in the eight-volume Deltora Quest series. It was first published in 2000 by Scholastic [1] and was awarded the "Notable Series in Children's Book of the Year Awards 2001: Younger Readers". [2]
Saori Hayami (早見 沙織, Hayami Saori, born May 29, 1991) is a Japanese voice actress and singer affiliated with I'm Enterprise. [2] As a singer, she is signed to Warner Bros. Home Entertainment. [3]
Scholar Andy Orchard suggests that Bifröst may mean "shimmering path." He notes that the first element of Bilröst—bil (meaning "a moment")—"suggests the fleeting nature of the rainbow," which he connects to the first element of Bifröst—the Old Norse verb bifa (meaning "to shimmer" or "to shake")—noting that the element evokes notions of the "lustrous sheen" of the bridge. [3]