Sony has explained why the Star Wars: Knight of the Old Republic remake trailer was recently made private, saying that it was because of expired licenses. However, given that the KOTOR remake announcement tweet from PlayStation was simultaneously deleted, it is unlikely to provide much solace.

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Stephen Totilo, a video game reporter at Axios, took to Twitter to state that after questioning both Disney and Sony about the delisted KOTOR remake trailer, Sony claimed that assets with licensed music are taken down when such licenses expire. The natural follow-up to that, which Totilo noted in the same tweet, is to question why a music license would expire for an upcoming game. There have been no further updates regarding this situation at the time of writing.

Although the remake may not yet be dead, fans should not expect it for some time. Shortly after several directors were fired, Saber Interactive took over the project entirely from Aspyr. Given that Aspyr had only gotten so far as a vertical slice, it is unlikely that the KOTOR remake will see the light of day for several years, if ever. At least for now, stakeholders seem interested in keeping the project alive.

The KOTOR remake is not the only Star Wars video game project known to be in the works, with Quantic Dream and Ubisoft developing Star Wars Eclipse and Star Wars Outlaws respectively. Eclipse is understood to be similar to previous David Cage titles, a predominantly narrative adventure with branching paths that is not expected until 2027. Outlaws is seemingly much further along and was revealed in the summer during the Ubisoft Forward presentation.

The Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic remake is currently in development for PC and PS5.

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