The upcoming Wonder Woman game from WB Games has swiped a veteran developer who worked on the highly successful God of War Ragnarok. For those who don’t remember, WB Games and Monolith Productions announced that a Wonder Woman game was in the works and the game got a fairly bland CGI trailer back in 2021.
Since then we haven’t gotten any news on how the project is coming along, and don’t even know how it is going to play. But what seems likely is that the game will get an announcement before the end of 2023.
As of the start of 2023, Mila Pavlin has joined the Wonder Woman game development team at Monolith. She will be serving as the Design Director UX on the game, which is similar to a role she had at Sony Santa Monica while working on God of War Ragnarok. While the role may not seem too big of a deal, it is crucial because Pavil will be working on the accessiblity features on the Wonder Woman game. She did the same on Ragnarok, and the game got awards for its accessiblity settings that were unmatch in the industry. So this means that the Wonder Woman game will also have a plethora of accessiblity features.
Been on the Wonder Woman game for a week now and already impressed with the teams dedication to accessibility. The game industry feels different than just a few years ago, in a Wonderful way! pic.twitter.com/35OHGGvvZM
— Mila Pavlin #Accessibility #WonderWoman (@MissFire4) January 8, 2023
What Will The Wonder Woman Game Be Like?
All we know is that Wonder Woman will be a single player open-world game, and might involve the Nemesis system from the Middle-Earth series of games. The game has not gotten a launch window as of yet, but considering its announcement, the game should me announced in 2023 with a release date set in the following year.
Hopefully, Monolith doesn’t resort to making the same game as Shadow Of War, but with a different DC coat of paint. The studio has been known to have a very redundant mindset considering its previous games. For those who don’t recall, Monolith decided to patent the Nemisis System barring anyone else to use it, while copying nearly all of it’s core game mechanics from other popular franchises like the Batman Arkham Series and the Assassin’s Creed series.