Over at CES 2022 , Intel has revealed its much-anticipated Alder Lake mobile processors which will be in new gaming laptops and Ultrabooks that we’ll also see unveiled at the show.
In fact, Intel made it clear that new H-series chips – the most powerful Alder Lake notebook CPUs – will be coming to over 100 laptop designs in the enthusiast and gaming laptop categories, plus ultraportables too. These machines will be produced by the usual suspects, namely the likes of Acer, Asus ROG, Dell, Gigabyte, HP, Lenovo, MSI, Razer and other vendors, and we can expect a fast ramp up with these models, Intel promises.
As the rumor mill has previously said , the H-series range will be headed up by the flagship Core i9-12900HK. This processor has six performance cores (with hyper-threading) and eight efficiency cores (without hyper-threading), making a total of 14-cores and 20-threads.
The max Turbo speed (for the main performance cores) is 5.0GHz with a base clock speed of 2.5GHz (efficiency cores are 3.8GHz and 1.8GHz respectively).
The 12900HK has 24MB of L3 cache and a base TDP of 45W stretching to 115W under max load. Its integrated graphics boasts 96 EUs (Execution Units) clocked at 1.45GHz.
Intel bills this as the ‘fastest mobile processor ever’ with a relative performance-to-power (Wattage) graph showing the 12900HK blowing away both its predecessor (11980HK) and the Ryzen 9 5900HX, and also beating out Apple’s M1 Max chip (heaps of salts with internal benchmarking as ever – but this certainly looks impressive on the face of it).
Intel also claims the new 12900HK is up to 28% faster in gaming when compared to both the 11980HK and Ryzen 9 5900HX. This is at 1080p (high settings) with the biggest lead for Team Blue’s chip on League of Legends, Hitman 3 (Intel tuned its CPUs for this game as you may recall) and CS:GO.
The 12900HK is pretty far ahead of the 5900HX in many of the game benchmarks shown, though it’s a much tighter race in certain titles (GTA V, Gears 5 and in particular Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, with there being only the very slightest difference in the latter).
In terms of content creation, the 12900HK is claimed to be 30% quicker than its predecessor (11980HK) in Blender, and a decent chunk swifter than the 5900HX (or Apple M1 Max for that matter). In Adobe Premiere Pro, it’s 44% faster than the 11980HK, and 14% better in AutoCAD.
Along with the 12900HK, there will of course be other models of Alder Lake 12th-gen mobile CPUs. Check out the full line-up and core specs in the below table:
SKU | Cores / Threads | Base Speed | Boost Speed | L3 Cache |
---|---|---|---|---|
i5-12450H | 8 (4P+4E) / 12 | 2.0GHz | 4.4GHz | 12MB |
i5-12500H | 12 (4P+8E) / 16 | 2.5GHz | 4.5GHz | 18MB |
i5-12600H | 12 (4P+8E) / 16 | 2.7GHz | 4.5GHz | 18MB |
i7-12650H | 10 (6P+4E) / 16 | 2.3GHz | 4.7GHz | 24MB |
i7-12700H | 14 (6P+8E) / 20 | 2.3GHz | 4.7GHz | 24MB |
i7-12800H | 14 (6P+8E) / 20 | 2.4GHz | 4.8GHz | 24MB |
i9-12900H | 14 (6P+8E) / 20 | 2.5GHz | 5.0GHz | 24MB |
i9-12900HK | 14 (6P+8E) / 20 | 2.5GHz | 5.0GHz | 24MB |
Intel also has a range of Alder Lake P-series processors for performance thin-and-light laptops as follows:
SKU | Cores / Threads | Base Speed | Boost Speed | L3 Cache |
---|---|---|---|---|
i3-1220P | 10 (2P+8E) / 12 | 1.5GHz | 4.4GHz | 12MB |
i5-1240P | 12 (4P+8E) / 16 | 1.7GHz | 4.4GHz | 12MB |
i5-1250P | 12 (4P+8E) / 16 | 1.7GHz | 4.4GHz | 12MB |
i7-1260P | 12 (4P+8E) / 16 | 2.1GHz | 4.7GHz | 18MB |
i7-1270P | 12 (4P+8E) / 16 | 2.2GHz | 4.8GHz | 18MB |
i7-1280P | 14 (6P+8E) / 20 | 1.8GHz | 4.8GHz | 24MB |
And furthermore, there are more affordable Alder Lake U-series models for thin laptops:
SKU | Cores / Threads | Base Speed | Boost Speed | L3 Cache |
---|---|---|---|---|
i3-1215U | 6 (2P+4E) / 8 | 1.2GHz | 4.4GHz | 10MB |
i5-1235U | 10 (2P+8E) / 12 | 1.3GHz | 4.4GHz | 12MB |
i5-1245U | 10 (2P+8E) / 12 | 1.6GHz | 4.4GHz | 12MB |
i7-1255U | 10 (2P+8E) / 12 | 1.7GHz | 4.7GHz | 12MB |
i7-1265U | 10 (2P+8E) / 12 | 1.8GHz | 4.8GHz | 12MB |
Analysis: A new chapter in the mobile CPU wars – Alder Lake vs Ryzen 6000
Intel is promising a swift deployment of these new Alder Lake laptop processors, and, in fact, the ‘fastest ramp’ yet for H-series models. How that ambition will hold up in the face of component shortages and the other production worries plaguing the tech industry at large, we’ll just have to see, but having 100+ laptop designs out of the gate is a good start, of course.
While Intel compares the flagship 12900HK to the Ryzen 9 5900HX here, the real battle will (eventually) be fought against AMD’s freshly revealed Ryzen 6000 models, which were also showed off at CES 2022.
We’ll just have to see how the performance battles pan out when laptops start emerging with Alder Lake on-board, as well as the new ‘Rembrandt’ mobile silicon from Team Red, and independent benchmarking can begin (as mentioned above, we have to take internal testing with a good deal of caution, as it inevitably aims to present products in the best possible light for understandable reasons). This conflict is likely to be fought not just on performance, though, but production and availability...
Why Samsung beating Pixel's Android updates is a huge deal
The Samsung Galaxy S22 range is finally here, but one of the most exciting announcements from Samsung wasn’t the phones themselves – or the Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 range – but rather the promise of longer software support for these devices and others.
The company has said that it will provide four years of Android updates to the Samsung Galaxy S22 range – meaning up to four major Android updates (along with numerous smaller ones), likely taking the devices all the way up to Android 16.
But these won’t be the only devices to benefit – the Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 range will too, and more surprisingly so will the Samsung Galaxy S21 range, the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 3 , and the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 – though as 2021 releases they might top out at Android 15.
Those four years of Android updates aren’t quite the end of the line for these devices either, as Samsung also promises five years of security updates. So while these phones and tablets might not get new Android versions after four years, they will be kept safe from security vulnerabilities for a further year.
Moving in the right direction
This, obviously, is good news for buyers – and for owners of any of those older devices. But more importantly it’s a very promising sign for the industry as a whole.
While Apple has always supported its phones for a long time, Android device makers historically haven’t. In fact, even now many Android phones only get two years of updates, and some don’t even manage that.
So five years of updates – including four years of Android version updates - is massively better, and it might be a sign that things are changing for the better, especially as this isn’t the first move towards longer support.
Back in 2021, Samsung made a similar announcement , offering three years of Android updates and four years of security patches on key devices, and that was seen as a big deal at the time. It didn’t come alone either – OnePlus, Oppo and others made similar promises .
Then, later in the year Google arrived with the Pixel 6 range and matched those rivals with a promise of at least three years of Android updates, but beat them with a promise of five years of security updates.
We’d hoped for even more, given that Google makes Android and – as of the Pixel 6 range – also designs its own chipsets (which can be a factor in updates, as the chipset also needs to support new software), but still, this was one more sign that things were heading in the right direction.
And with this new announcement from Samsung, we can see that this momentum hasn’t slowed down. Samsung has beat Google here, and now the ball is in other phone makers' courts to match or beat Samsung’s promise.
Driven by competition
They might well do so too, since longer term support can make a device far more desirable – especially when it’s high-end. After all, no one wants to spend over a grand on a phone, only for it to become obsolete (or at least out of date and less safe to use) a few years later.
So potential buyers who are aware of Samsung’s promise here will have one less reason to look at rivals’ offerings, unless those rivals move to match this.
Hopefully they will, because that would be good for consumers – not to mention the environment, with fewer phones ditched as people would potentially upgrade less often.
There’s certainly still work to be done here, even for Samsung, which trails behind Apple still in terms of software support, and is only promising these lengthy durations for premium models.
So hopefully the steady stream of promises will continue, as companies aim to one-up each other to remain competitive, and maybe one day soon the Android ecosystem will have the sort of software support it should have had from day one.
Dragon Age 4 news, rumors and trailers
Dragon Age 4 is in development and it's safe to say that fans of the series are excited for their next trip to Thedas.
Though it's been in development for a few years now, at the moment Dragon Age 4 doesn't actually have a release window and solid, official information on what we can expect from it is still fairly thin on the ground.
Case in point—we're calling the game Dragon Age 4, but a recent trailer appears to suggest that the series might defy its own (admittedly inconsistent) naming conventions with its fourth outing and simply go by the title 'Dragon Age'. Regardless of whether the title includes a number 4, however, it looks like the game is going to be a direct sequel to 2014's Dragon Age: Inquisition, bringing back familiar characters like Varric and Solas.
In a recent blog post , BioWare promised that we'll “start to hear more from the Dragon Age team in the form of blogs and social content” as we get further into 2022. While we wait, keep scrolling and enjoy all the confirmed news and intriguing rumors we have for Dragon Age 4 so far.
[Update: A brief community update has revealed that Dragon Age 4's characters will have 'more personality than they have ever had in the past'. Read on to find out more. ]
Dragon Age 4: cut to the chase
Despite the fact that the game’s development had long been a very open secret, Dragon Age 4 was only officially announced by BioWare a couple of years ago. Since then, BioWare has kept its cards pretty close to its chest and neither a release date nor a release window has been confirmed.
"Hey everyone, we have been working on a new Dragon Age game for quite a while now and I am pleased to finally tease the existence of this project," said Mark Darrah, executive producer on a BioWare blog post . "While we won’t be sharing any details for now, I can tell you we have been building a new team around a core of Dragon Age veterans, people I’ve worked with on Dragon Age, Jade Empire, and some of whom I’ve worked with since the Baldur’s Gate days.
"I’m so excited to show you more!"
EA's 2019 earnings call (via Eurogamer ) had a note about Dragon Age 4 that suggests we won't see it released for a couple of years yet. During the call, the company's CFO Blake Jorgensen said that the game "probably comes after fiscal '22". This lines up with a 2021 report from GamesBeat's Jeff Grubb, who claims that multiple sources familiar with the project have said the game is on track for a 2023 release.
Jeff Grubb stuck by his 2023 estimate in a February 2022 episode of his GiantBomb video series GrubbSnax . In that, Grubb said that the game is in "very good shape" but that it's "still at least 18 months out" and suggested that we may not get our hands on it until "maybe late 2023" at the earliest.
Shortly after this report, BioWare posted an official development update , stating that the game is "right in the middle of Production" and promising further updates "later this year".
Basically, it looks like Dragon Age 4, if that is its real name, won't be with us until 2023 at the earliest.
Platforms haven't been officially confirmed but, given its release date seems to be a while off and a Gamescom 2020 clip made mention of "next-generation technology", it's likely that Dragon Age 4 will be a release for PS5 and Xbox Series X as well as PC.
The Game Awards 2020 brought hungry Dragon Age fans a brand new CGI trailer to enjoy. Though it still doesn't reveal very much, it does feature the characters Varric and Solas as well as some extremely pretty locations that we will likely explore when we can finally become the new hero of Thedas.
At Gamescom Opening Night Live, we got a behind-the-scenes video with the developers at BioWare who are keen to start talking about their plans for the fourth installment of the game. Take a look for yourself below:
The Game Awards 2018 had plenty of reveals but one of the biggest was a teaser trailer for Dragon Age 4. At only a minute long, the trailer doesn’t give much away but the hashtag TheDreadWolfRises as well as the appearance of Inquisition’s Solas is enough to pique any fan’s interest.
You can watch the teaser trailer below:
Characters will have 'more personality'
BioWare has given a brief community update on Dragon Age 4 in an April 2022 blog post as part of the developer’s efforts “to further pull back the curtain for a more transparent look into the process of making the games you love”.
In the post , Dragon Age technical director Maciej Kurowski says that a principal of the game’s development has been to have “the right tools that best fit our game” so that “developers are able to be at their most creative”.
Kurowski adds that he “can’t wait to talk more about some of the interesting things we have done on the tech side for Dragon Age. We take characters very seriously and do a lot of work to give them more personality than they have ever had in the past.”
Though he couldn’t reveal any more than that, Kurowski says more will be revealed “over time” and that “it’s shaping up to be something amazing.”
It’s “in the middle of production”
BioWare has posted a development update on Dragon Age 4, describing it as being “in the middle of production.”
In the February 2022 post, BioWare general manager Gary McKay said that there are “are a few different stages to a game’s development” and that Dragon Age 4 is currently “right in the middle of Production, which is a great feeling. Our blueprint was completed last year, so we’re now focused on building out our vision: creating amazing environments, deep characters, strong gameplay, impactful writing, emotional cinematics – and much more. The blueprint for the game is well understood and the team is focused.”
McKay went on to announce that the game’s executive producer, Christian Dailey, is leaving BioWare. With Dailey’s departure, McKay explains that “A strong leadership team of industry and Dragon Age veterans is in place to carry us through Production and beyond.” Mac Walters, who led development on Mass Effect Legendary Edition, is production director; Dragon Age design director, Corrine Busche, is game director; and long-time Dragon Age team member, Benoit Houle, is director of product development. McKay says that he will also be working closely with the team.
McKay closed out the Dragon Age 4 news with a promise that fans will “start to hear more from the Dragon Age team in the form of blogs and social content” later this year, adding “As we move through development we’ll also be in regular communication with players who sit on our community council. As passionate fans like you, we take their feedback seriously. We are also listening to all of you as you share your thoughts and experiences, so keep talking to us!”
In “very good shape” but not a 2022 release
Dragon Age 4's development is on schedule but we won't get our hands on the next entry in BioWare's RPG series until at least 2023, according to a new report.
In the latest episode of his GiantBomb video series GrubbSnax (only available for premium members), Grubb claimed that Dragon Age 4 is in "very good shape" according to his sources (via VGC ).
Grubb went on to say that developer BioWare is apparently where it's "supposed to be" in its development cycle for Dragon Age 4 and that the "game is on schedule".
However, it sounds like we won't be getting our hands on Dragon Age 4 in 2022, with the journalist claiming that the game is "still at least 18 months out" and adding that we may not get our hands on it until "maybe late 2023" at the earliest.
"Built on choices that matter”
In a brief update on the development of Dragon Age 4, BioWare general manager Gary McKay dropped a small, but substantial, detail about Dragon Age 4.
“We have a veteran group of talented developers working on the next iteration of the franchise,” McKay wrote. “We are focused on a single-player experience that is built on choices that matter.”
The details also came alongside further comments, in which McKay emphasized how the game is being developed to rebuild goodwill among the studio's long-time fans, with many having been left disappointed by the studio's most recent releases.
“When I took on the GM role, I talked about rebuilding our reputation, and that remains a huge priority,” he wrote. “We are laser-focused on building back the trust of our fans and community, and we plan to do that by delivering the types of games that we are best known for and ensuring they are of the highest quality.“
McKay went on to say that he wants future BioWare releases, like Dragon Age 4, to represent “seminal moments in the industry” that garner similar reactions that last year’s Mass Effect Legendary Edition received.
Commitment to single-player
BioWare, has confirmed that Dragon Age 4 will be a “single-player focused experience.” The confirmation comes by way of a 2021 blog post celebrating Dragon Age Day, which takes place on December 4 each year. In the post, the Dragon Age team thanked the community for their passion and said that they’re “still hard at work” on what will be a “single-player focused experience for Dragon Age.”
In the post, BioWare also said that we can expect more updates on the game in 2022, stating that they’re “excited for next year when we can talk more about what we're working on”.
Current-gen only?
Dragon Age 4 reportedly won't be coming to either PS4 or Xbox One , instead opting for a current-gen only release on PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X/S, as reported by Destructoid .
The news comes after a LinkedIn post from one of Dragon Age 4's lead designers described the game as being in development for "PS5/Xbox Series X+S/PC," omitting mention of last generation's consoles. The report was corroborated by insider Jeff Grubb , who claimed he's heard the same thing from his sources.
Potentially, this is very good news. It means that Dragon Age 4's development could go a lot smoother, not having to optimize or scale the game down to support older consoles, and will allow the game to look as good as possible on the best hardware available right now.
Reportedly on track for a 2023 release
Just as BioWare said, Dragon Age 4 didn’t make an appearance at EA Play Live 2021 with an official update but a recent report from GamesBeat could offer some explanation as to why.
GamesBeat’s Jeff Grubb claims that multiple sources familiar with the project have said the game is on track for a 2023 release, though EA is not willing to reveal a release window just yet and has declined to comment on the report. According to the report, EA held back from providing a Dragon Age 4 update at EA Play Live 2021, to enable it to “get the game into position to begin marketing in earnest”, likely in 2022.
The report also corroborates Bloomberg's report from earlier this year that BioWare has decided to drop plans for a Dragon Age 4 live-service model, instead opting to build the new Dragon Age as a single-player experience, like its predecessors. GamesBeat does, however, suggest that Dragon Age 4 could have an online multiplayer element, similar to Dragon Age: Inquisition.
A 2023 release window would line up with previous comments from EA, such as a 2019 earnings call in which the company’s chief financial officer Blake Jorgensen stated that Dragon Age 4 “probably comes after fiscal '22”, meaning the earliest we could see the new Dragon Age is April 2022 - when the next fiscal year begins.
Antivan Crows
Dragon Age fans have been living on crumbs of concept art and the latest features what appears to be the Antivan Crows. Dragon Age 4 executive producer, Christian Dailey, shared the new image on Twitter with an accompanying message that reads, “sorry for no EA Play news this year but please know that the team is heads down with a lot of momentum and making great progress. We are excited to share more when the time is right. Please stay safe and have a great weekend!”
Based on the insignia in the corner of the image and the clothing of the characters, the art Dailey shared features the Antivan Crows, an organization of thieves, assassins and spies with a long, important and bloody history in Antiva and Thedas as a whole.
Return of the Grey Wardens? Dragon Age fans have been treated to a hint that the Grey Wardens will make an appearance in the game. The tease came in the form of an image of the game, tweeted by executive producer Christian Dailey.
New character concept art Brace yourself for another piece of Dragon Age 4 concept art. BioWare Austin Executive Producer, Christian Dailey, tweeted the art out in March 2021 with the message “Happy Friday my friends - I hope you are all staying out of the rain! Stay safe. Have a great weekend!!”. The image shows a mage standing in a rain-drenched alley, wielding a staff carved to look like a snake.
Unfortunately Dailey didn’t provide any more context on the image but given the dearth of Dragon Age 4 information, it’s welcome.
Single-player only? According to a report from Bloomberg, Dragon Age 4 is going to be an entirely single-player experience after a recent pivot in development.
The report claims that Dragon Age 4 had been designed with a heavy multiplayer emphasis, but has transitioned to a single-player only game in recent months following “a recent multiplayer flop” – heavily implying that Anthem’s decline and failure partially caused the pivot in Dragon Age 4. But it wasn't just the failure of Anthem – the report cited the success of Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order as a motivation to return the game to a solo focus.
While this isn't definitive, the report noted that the 30-person team dedicated to the Anthem overhaul was re-tasked to work on Dragon Age 4, showing increased focus on the game.
This report has also been corroborated by GamesBeat's Jeff Grubb who claims in a July 2021 report that "BioWare is building the next Dragon Age as a single-player narrative adventure, just like the previous entries in the series", though he doesn't discount the possibility of an online multiplayer like Dragon Age: Inquisition.
Set in Tevinter It looks like, as long-suspected, Dragon Age 4 is going to be set in Tevinter, if a recently released BioWare book is anything to go by. As spotted by Eurogamer in early 2021, BioWare: Stories and Secrets from 25 Years of Game Development confirms that Tevinter is the setting for Dragon Age 4.
This will make it the first time players will get to visit Tevinter, which was set up as the next location at the end of Dragon Age: Inquisition’s Trespasser DLC. According to Eurogamer, the book also hints that Dragon Age 4 will take us to other locations, too, as Antiva City, the capital of Antiva, is also shown in the book.
The Game Awards 2020 As teased by BioWare, The Game Awards 2020 brought a brand new Dragon Age trailer (scroll up to watch). The CGI trailer was extremely pretty but it didn't reveal too much more about the game. What it did confirm, however, is that Dragon Age 4 will see the return of Solas from Dragon Age: Inquisition as well as the beloved Varric who fills a narratorial as well as companion role in the series.
It also confirmed that players will return to Thedas as a new hero, "the kind of hero they'll never see coming", according to Varric. As the new hero, players will have to "Forge a courageous fellowship to challenge the gathering storm. Friendship, drama, and romance abound as you bring striking individuals together into an extraordinary team. Become the hero and light the beacon of hope in their darkest moments."
Judging from the locations shown in the trailer (and previous rumors and the ending of Inquisition) it looks like we'll may finally make the journey to the Tevinter Imperium, Thedas' ancient country ruled by magisters, though this is still to be confirmed. The trailer didn't show any gameplay or confirm any kind of release window, but we're likely going to have to wait some time for anything like that.
The trailer suggested that the fourth game in the Dragon Age series is going to drop subtitles and numbers and simply be released as Dragon Age but this remains unclear.
Casey Hudson and Mark Darrah leave BioWare In what could be perceived as a blow to the development of Dragon Age 4, Casey Hudson, the general manager of BioWare, and Mark Darrah, the executive producer on Dragon Age, are departing the studio. BioWare and Darrah have reassured fans that the Dragon Age franchise is still in good hands with Christian Dailey who will replace Mark Darrah.
Gamescom 2020 Gamescom 2020 gave us an update Dragon Age 4 with a behind-the-scenes video (scroll up to watch) featuring the development team at BioWare.
Although there weren’t too many specifics, the video gave a rousing look at some voice recording footage, some in-development game footage as well as interviews with developers. At the beginning of the video General Manager of BioWare Casey Hudson mentioned the game is still in "early production" but added that the studio is making use of "next-generation technology" in the development of the game. Developers also mentioned that Dragon Age 4 will have “new things” and “new places” and chance to “interact with people who live and grew up in these spaces as well.”
The game will explore “what happens when you don’t have power, what happens when the people in charge don’t address the issues” and will allow players to form “close relationship with game characters” who will be “loved or hated”, with a particular focus on the divisiveness of Solas.
An update from Mark Darrah Producer, Mark Darrah, posted on Twitter regarding Dragon Age 4 again, this time with more of an aim to provide clarity on the game's progress than to tease fans. In his tweet, Darrah confirms that work on Dragon Age 4 is still underway and that progress is still being made. However, he also notes that, no doubt due to the coronavirus pandemic, the development team is having to work from home and that this is "harder".
Many development teams have been forced to work from home during the pandemic and shifting working processes has the potential to cause some development slow-downs or disruptions for studios. Darrah hasn't given any insight into how this "harder" way of working has impacted the team behind Dragon Age 4 or progress on the game, but fans will no doubt be glad to know that progress is still being made.
EA Play 2020 It was largely quiet on the Dragon Age 4 front during EA Play 2020 but it's possible the game wasn't completely absent. A montage of images was shown while EA chief studio officer Laura Miele discussed how “Generation shifts are an opportunity to push beyond the boundaries of gaming as we know it today, and this time is no different,” adding that “Our studios are taking their crazy, ambitious ideas, and making them real.”
Miele then moved onto BioWare specifically, saying that the studio "imagines and creates worlds where you become the hero of your own story. And we're using this next generation of technology to make those fantasy worlds your reality.”
The images shown during this elaboration on BioWare's next-gen plans were not explicitly tied to a specific game but they certainly look like they're from Dragon Age 4, largely because of what appears to be the presence of red lyrium, which appears often in the Dragon Age universe, usually to cause trouble.
EA October Earnings Call EA's recent earnings call (via Eurogamer ) had a note about Dragon Age 4 that suggests we won't see it released for a couple of years yet. During the call, the company's CFO Blake Jorgensen said that the game "probably comes after fiscal '22." This would mean that the earliest the next Dragon Age should be expected is April 2022. That would mean around an eight year gap between entries but fans will no doubt be happy to wait if it means getting things right.
September Update If the silence around Dragon Age 4 since its initial teaser has left you feeling nervous for the game's future, worry not as BioWare's Casey Hudson made reference to the game's ongoing development in a BioWare blog post .
The post went into more detail on games like Anthem and Star Wars: The Old Republic, while Dragon Age 4 came under the "super-secret" category so not much can be said. Hudson did, however, say that "one of our projects has a large and growing team in Edmonton working through pre-production, and based on the progress I’m seeing, I can confirm that indeed the Dread Wolf rises." It's not much but it is confirmation that progress on Dragon Age 4 is still being made.
Fernando Melo departure On the heels of Anthem's lead producer, Ben Irving, Dragon Age 4 lead producer, Fernando Melo has left BioWare. Melo worked on Dragon Age: Origins and Dragon Age 2 before being appointed lead producer on Dragon Age 4 (codenamed 'Morrison'.)
In a thread of tweets, Melo explained that he is taking "time to disconnect" after 12 years at BioWare and in an email to his colleagues he said that "Morrison is well underway to becoming the definitive Dragon Age experience" which bodes well for fans.
Live Service elements? Not likely Back in January 2018 a report from Kotaku suggested that Dragon Age 4 could include live elements, stirring some fan concern that this could mean an always-online multiplayer approach.
Then, in April 2019, Kotaku reported that while Dragon Age 4 game could potentially include Anthem-like live elements, it won’t simply be “Anthem with dragons”. One developer told Kotaku:
“The idea was that Anthem would be the online game and that Dragon Age and Mass Effect, while they may experiment with online portions, that’s not what defines them as franchises. I don’t think you’ll see us completely change those franchises.”
The suggestion was that any live plans for Dragon Age aren’t likely to take the form of a shared online world exactly like Anthem’s and will still be suited to the single-player adventuring Dragon Age is known for.
In a tweet in January 2018, Casey Hudson also stated that the “live” elements being considered are actually ways of continuing the game’s story after the main story has been completed.
Since these reports, however, Bloomberg has claimed in 2021 report that development has once again pivoted and that Dragon Age 4 is planned to be a single-player experience, dropping any plans for heavy multiplayer emphasis following the disappointing performance of Anthem.
The Game Awards 2018 - official announcement After years without an update, BioWare officially announced during The Game Awards 2018 that it will be returning to Thedas in a new Dragon Age title.
According to a report by Venture Beat (and understood to be correct by Eurogamer ), we expected an announcement regarding Dragon Age 4 during The Game Awards 2018 - and BioWare didn't disappoint.
What that announcement turned out to be, interestingly, was the game's first 1-minute-long teaser trailer that re-introduced Fen'Harel, the elven god of betrayal, and Solas from Dragon Age Inquisition.
We didn't get any gameplay or story details but, for now, the confirmation from BioWare is enough to keep the hype train chugging.
Roundabout confirmations - confirmed Regardless of whether or not BioWare had confirmed it, Dragon Age fans were pretty certain that another game was going to be in the works. Partly because they had faith in the power of their sheer force of will and partly because over the last couple of years there have been hints from BioWare that something would indeed be happening. It’s the secret that was never really a secret - and the fans were right.
One non-official confirmation came from executive producer Mark Darrah, who tweeted in January 2018 that he’s working on both Dragon Age as well as BioWare’s next big IP, Anthem.
Though he’s now left the company, BioWare veteran Mike Laidlaw was tweeting that there was still another couple of games in Dragon Age series yet back in mid-2017. Even before that, Alexis Kennedy became the writer that launched a thousand headlines after comments he made in an interview with Eurogamer were taken as a semi-official confirmation of the game’s existence and his place in it.
In the interview Kennedy teased that he's been "given considerable autonomy to work on a storyline bit of lore which is well-segregated from other parts of the game.“
”I don't want to exaggerate the degree of the chunk [I'm writing],“ Kennedy was at pains to add. ”It's nothing that grandiose, but it is distinct. It's a bit of lore which has not been addressed much to date in Dragon Age.“
Story and character Every game in the Dragon Age franchise has had a heavy emphasis on story and character and fans will be glad to know that Dragon Age 4 isn’t likely to be any different.
After Mark Darrah tweeted that he was working on the game, BioWare general manager Casey Hudson chipped in with his own elaborative tweet. In this tweet he said it was “too early to talk details” but the game would be “story & character focused.”
It seems that the game will continue on from Inquisition's Trespasser DLC in some senses given the appearance of Solas and Varric in its teaser trailers, though the 2020 trailer has confirmed that players will step into the shoes of a new hero rather than the Inquisitor.
We've known for some time that writers are working on lore and side quests, following Alexis Kennedy’s interview with Eurogamer in 2017 in which he confirmed he was working on a part of the game that’s “well-segregated” from the rest and focuses on some lore that’s not been widely addressed.
Kennedy, who has worked on titles such as Sunless Sea and Fallen London, said the subject matter would not be surprising to those familiar with his work. To us this implies that his quest (or quests) will include thoughtful choices, themes of tragic love and desire and an underlying sense of unease.
A world like Dragon Age: Inquisition We hope that the next Dragon Age game has a map similar to the one in Dragon Age: Inquisition, by which we mean we hope it's big and open without being overwhelming. It was the perfect follow-up to the closed and repetitive maps of Dragon Age 2 and we’d like this approach to continue.
Solve that cliffhanger Our previous point brings us to this one – we’d really like that Solas storyline to continue to be explored. He’s the perfect focus for the next game and the player’s approach to him is the perfect narrative crux.
(Image credits: BioWare)