We can piece together what might have happened

Kannel: 
PSO2 Meseta

SEGA did not just wait to attract PSO2 into the west. Remember that there were strategies to localize the game early on, but for one reason or the job was scrapped until lately. The pso2.com page was active as early as 2012, revealing teasers and other details on the match with a large"COMING SOON" plastered on the webpage. SEGA announced plans to localize PSO2 only days after the JP launch, hoping to launch in 2013. Come a year ago, all of a sudden SEGA admits PSO2 coming into the west onto Microsoft's platform. With a bit of digging, we can piece together what might have happened.

Making and hosting an MMO isn't affordable. Even if the dev work is already done, you still will need to get a translation team, customer service , and servers to sponsor the match. What happened to SEGA that they had to cut funding for the localization project? The company to buy Atlus was none apart from SEGA. Even with all the firm being held alfoat by SEGA, the business required to earn revenue. Cue the milking of hot titles Persona 3 and 4. Irrespective of what actually occurred, we could see that SEGA has been on a downward trend financially over the last ten years. You can take a peek at the published financial reports on your own. While PSO2 has been one of their most prosperous titles, it does not cost as much to keep it in JP compared to hiring a new team and setting up new infrastructure to get it localized. It would be a huge threat for SEGA to try and force the game to the west. The need exists, but with all these foreigners already playing the JP servers, SEGA may have been and decided it wasn't required to try and create that push. The failure of this SEA server did not help with this decision, even if the trigger drops upon Asiasoft's poor handling of this game.

We know that the foreign population about the JP servers is little compared to the people playing on the NA servers, but hindsight is 20/20. Speaking of 2020, input Microsoft. A number of decades ago, Microsoft opens up Azure for gaming. While we don't know who , it is quite clear that there was an agreement between the two businesses: Microsoft can finance the PSO2 localization job in exchange for SEGA utilizing and analyzing Microsoft's platform. The rest is history. SEGA did not wait because they wanted to.

If you want to know more about PSO2, you can visit https://www.pso2ah.com/

. , , , ,