If you’re an anime fan, chances are you’ve watched Akira Toriyama’s work without necessarily working. From Dragon Ball to Sand Land you’ll be able to notice his distinctive art style and unique storytelling from a mile away.
Unfortunately, the man himself passed a few months prior to the release of Sand Land, but he did see late builds of his much-loved work come to life, and we were lucky enough to talk to Keishu Minami, the game’s producer, about everything you have in store for you when you boot it up for the first time!
[Some of the answers below have been edited for clarity and length.]
For our readers who may not necessarily be aware of yourselves, would you mind telling us who you are and what Sand Land is about?
I am Keishu Minami from Bandai Namco Entertainment and the producer of the Sand Land game. I, myself am a fan of Toriyama-sensei so I...
Unfortunately, the man himself passed a few months prior to the release of Sand Land, but he did see late builds of his much-loved work come to life, and we were lucky enough to talk to Keishu Minami, the game’s producer, about everything you have in store for you when you boot it up for the first time!
[Some of the answers below have been edited for clarity and length.]
For our readers who may not necessarily be aware of yourselves, would you mind telling us who you are and what Sand Land is about?
I am Keishu Minami from Bandai Namco Entertainment and the producer of the Sand Land game. I, myself am a fan of Toriyama-sensei so I...
- 5/12/2024
- by Luke Addison
- FandomWire
The television landscape is overflowing with failed pilots; those poor souls who try to go to series, but are forever doomed to perish in the eternal hellfire of the forgotten. (And YouTube.) Sometimes the shows are not picked up for financial reasons, and sometimes they just give off a "hell No" vibe that even TV executives can’t miss. And then you have Gene Roddenberry, Star Trek’s mastermind, who by the mid-’70s produced failed pilot after failed pilot. His last try before the impending Trek-aissance was Spectre (1977), a very well-made Satanic Panic meets Sherlock Holmes proposal that promised a lot of ghoulish fun had it been picked up. As is, it’s a groovy (and randy) time capsule of an era when the Devil had his share of air time.
Produced by 20th Century Fox Television, Spectre originally aired May 21st as an NBC Saturday Night at the Movies,...
Produced by 20th Century Fox Television, Spectre originally aired May 21st as an NBC Saturday Night at the Movies,...
- 4/7/2019
- by Scott Drebit
- DailyDead
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