NeteaseはMarvel Rivals Devチームを閉鎖します

NeteaseのMarvel Rivals Developmentチームの予期しない終了は、ゲームコミュニティに衝撃を与えました。ゲームの作成とメンテナンスに貢献したチーム全体は、公開の説明なしに却下され、ゲームの将来についての憶測を引き起こしました。考えられる理由には、ゲームのパフォーマンス、NetEaseでの内部シフト、またはMarvelパートナーシップの変化が含まれます。
これにより、マーベルライバルのプレイヤーは、将来の更新、コンテンツ、サポートについて不確実になります。 Neteaseはその影響について公式にコメントしていませんが、ゲームの長期的な実行可能性に関する懸念は広まっています。この状況は、開発者がプレーヤーの関与を維持し、競争の激しい市場で企業の目標を達成する際に直面する課題を強調しています。マーベルのライバルの運命は、Neteaseがモバイルゲーム戦略を再評価するため、不確実なままです。
Neteaseの明確化に続いて、以前に報告したように、Thaddeus SasserがMarvel Rivalsの開発責任者ではなかったことが明らかになりました。 Guangyun Chenはその立場を保持しました。さらに、Neteaseは、西洋チームの解散が西洋の聴衆のコミュニケーションやサポートに影響を与えないことをプレイヤーに保証します。
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Two Embers – Part 1
By [Your Name]
The wind howled across the shattered plains of Eldryth, carrying with it the scent of ash and forgotten prayers. Once, this land had bloomed beneath twin suns—golden and silver—cradled in the arms of the sky. Now, only two embers remained: one buried deep in the heart of the Obsidian Spire, the other flickering faintly in the chest of a girl who did not know her name.
She awoke beneath a sky split in two.
One half burned crimson, the other wept silver mist. The earth cracked like old parchment, and from the fissures rose whispers—voices not of men, nor beasts, but of memory itself. Her fingers curled around a shard of obsidian, warm to the touch, humming with a rhythm that matched her pulse.
She didn’t remember how she got here. She remembered nothing—not her mother’s lullaby, not the sound of her first breath, not even the shape of her face in the still pools of long-dead lakes.
Only the ember.
And the dream.
“When the twins fall, the world will wake,” the dream whispered. “But not as it was. Not as it should be.”
She sat up. The shard pulsed. Her reflection shimmered within it—not a face, but a storm: a woman with hair like flame and eyes like dying stars.
“You’re not real,” she said, voice cracked from disuse.
But the reflection smiled.
And spoke.
“I am you. I am what was lost. I am what was never meant to be found.”
She stumbled to her feet, wind tearing at her tattered cloak—the color of dust and midnight. Around her, ruins of a cathedral rose from the earth, its spires fused with bone and blackened iron. The name carved into its fallen arch read: Aetherion.
Her hand trembled as she touched the stone. A vision tore through her:
A war not of swords, but of light.
Two beings—twin stars forged in fire—clashing in the sky. One wore the face of a god, the other… a child.
She gasped.
And the ember screamed.
From the east, a sound like a thousand bells made of glass. A procession of shadows moved across the horizon—hooded figures with eyes of ash, marching in silence. Their chants were not in any tongue, but in absence. In silence.
She turned to flee—then stopped.
Because behind her, in the west, a new light rose.
Not silver. Not gold.
Blue.
And from it stepped a man—tall, scarred, wearing armor of woven wind and memory. In his hand, a sword without a blade. Its hilt bore the same mark as the shard in her palm.
“Eira,” he said, voice like wind over graves. “You’ve come at last.”
She stepped back. “Who are you?”
He looked at her, and for the first time, his face cracked—just slightly.
“I was your father,” he said. “And I thought I’d buried you with the world.”
The ground trembled. The sky split again.
And from the ember in her hand, a voice rose—not hers, not his.
“The first ember dies. The second awakens. The war begins.”
To Be Continued in Part 2: "The Blood of the Twin Suns"
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