Available since April 24th, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is currently on everyone's lips. It must be said that the French studio behind the game's creation, Sandfall Interactive, has brought a true phenomenon to life. Congratulated by Emmanuel Macron himself for its work, the studio proudly announced this week that it had reached the very impressive milestone of two million copies sold in the space of nine days. Faced with such success, one question inevitably arises: can we expect one or more DLCs in the future?
DLCs on the way for Clair Obscur: Expedition 33?
If you've been following the news in recent days, you've probably seen the news that this was a possibility. The source? The game's writer herself, Jennifer Svedberg-Yen, responded to an Instagram user: "We've always said that if there's a strong desire from players, we'd like to do something extra, and based on the responses so far, I'd say the chances are good." But it ultimately appears that we shouldn't take this too seriously. And for good reason: when asked about this during an interview with The Washington Post, Guillaume Broche and Tom Guillermin, the studio's founders, were keen to set the record straight. According to them, absolutely nothing is on the agenda for the moment. In fact, the team is mainly focused on improvements that can be made to the title, which already seems to be taking a lot of energy from them. "We're exhausted. We're all in the game, there's nothing left," Broche said a little later in the interview.
Whoever lives will see
For her part, Svedberg-Yen reportedly assured that her comments had been taken out of context, and that she was not necessarily referring to the arrival of future expansions. For the time being, it is therefore wiser not to expect too much from Sandfall, which, let's remember, remains a small team of only around thirty developers. That being said, this would not be the first time that a studio has denied information before coming back to it later. We'll see, then, what the future of Clair Obscure really holds.
Source: The Washington Post
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