What You Missed During Last Night s Event
Yesterday
Square Enix held a 35th Anniversary Event for
Dragon Quest, the beloved classic JRPG franchise. The event contained announcements for several games and some other exciting news specifically for western audiences. The franchise has finally graduated from being a niche Japanese RPG to become a well-recognized franchise worldwide. It seems that Square Enix is acting accordingly and pulling out all of the stops for the franchise’s future and giving fans more of what they want. Here is what got announced last night.
Dragon Quest X
Dragon Quest X Online will receive its 6th version update, which aligns with the game’s 10th anniversary. Despite years of speculation, the title has never received a release outside of Asia. Unfortunately, it seems this will not change as it appeared during the stream that the release was not for international audiences. However, following this announcement was one for a top-down offline version o
Latest news on Sega, the Japanese multinational video game developer famed for consoles such as the Genesis and Dreamcast, and Sonic the Hedgehog games.
On May 4, a new interactive exhibit a vintage Greyhound bus rolled into the Freedom Rides Museum in Montgomery, Alabama.
For a decade, the museum has told the stories of the 400-plus men and women, Black and white, who boarded interstate buses headed south in the summer of 1961. Their goal was to compel leaders to enforce Supreme Court decisions banning segregation on buses and in transportation facilities throughout the United States.
The premiere commemorates the 60th anniversary of the date the initial Congress of Racial Equality-sponsored Freedom Riders drove out of Washington, D.C., to challenge the segregation of interstate travel.
It’s hard to imagine today that only 60 years ago, boarding a Greyhound bus and taking a seat next to a passenger of another race was revolutionary; an act that could leave you flat out on the pavement or at risk of fatal harm.
But Montgomery’s Freedom Rides Museum is in the business of remembering.
For a decade, the museum has told the stories of more than 400 young men and women, Black and white the youngest of them 13 and the oldest 22 who boarded interstate buses headed south in the summer of 1961 with a strict purpose: to compel authorities to enforce Supreme Court decisions banning segregation on buses and in transportation facilities throughout the U.S.