Will New Mass Effect Combine Andromeda With Trilogy? Fresh concept art hints

Three new concept art for the next part have appeared online Mass effectdeveloped by the studio BioWare officially confirmed on N7 Day with the announcement of the remastered trilogy.

Images were taken from the newly released artbook BioWare: Stories and Secrets from 25 Years of Game Development and published on Tumblr… Unfortunately, not yet in the best quality.

The first illustration shows a spaceship already familiar from a recent teaser and silhouettes of creatures similar to Angars from Mass Effect: Andromeda… Some fans were quick to suggest that the new part could be a sequel to Andromeda, but perhaps this is just a placeholder.

The second picture demonstrates some towering buildings, very closely resembling the architecture of the ancient Remnant race from the same Mass Effect: Andromeda. The Remnants were a mysterious advanced civilization that ruled Andromeda and disappeared before the events of the game itself.

Finally, the third art seems to depict the construction of a new repeater – one of the devices that transported Normandy along the Milky Way in the original trilogy. Judging by the MR-7 markings, they are produced by a whole network, but for what purpose it is still unknown.

Potentially, they can serve to move inside one of the galaxies, or, alternatively, it is some kind of super-relay connecting the Milky Way and Andromeda.

The book also contains a small commentary from project manager Mike Gamble, in which he says that the developers are focused on creating something truly worthwhile for the fans.

Read also: Cyberpunk 2077 will be released on two discs – there is information about the size of the game for the PlayStation 4

Add to our Telegram channel using this link or search for it manually in the search by name gmradost… There we publish, including what does not fall into the news feed Also subscribe to us in Yandex.Dzene, Twitter and VK. And don’t forget that we now have a dark theme and ribbon instead of tiles.