
Bomb Rush Cyberfunk is due out 2021 for PC. We’re excited to see more of the game, and you can add the game to your wishlist by checking out the Steam page.

The game’s steam page describes Bomb Rush Cyberfunk as a game where players will “dance, paint, trick, face off with the cops and stake your claim to the extrusions and cavities of a sprawling metropolis in an alternate future”. Naganuma had worked with Team Reptile before on Lethal League Blaze. While none of the developers from SEGA had a hand in creating this game, thus why it is not a spiritual successor, Team Reptile did manage to get Hideki Naganuma to work on some music for the game’s soundtrack. Inaccurately referred to as a spiritual successor to Jet Set Radio and Jet Set Radio Future by some members of the gaming community, the game is instead a loving homage to the classic SEGA franchise emulating the art style, gameplay and even music. Just kidding, I’m talking about Jet Set Radio. From Team Reptiles street action game Bomb Rush Cyberfunk. 'In a world from the mind of Dion Koster, where self-styled crews are equipped with personal boostpacks, new heights of graffiti are reached,' say. The teaser trailer is a short 14 seconds but it doesnt take even that long to catch its vibe. One look at the game and you can guess what SEGA game the team not only was heavily inspired by, but almost straight up lifted from with surprising 1:1 accuracy. Hideki Naganuma scores Team Reptiles Bomb Rush Cyberfunk. Preview is not available for songs under copyright collective. Bomb Rush Cyberfunk does share a lot with JSR: tagging, tricks, cops, and its composer Hideki Naganuma.

Indie studio Team Reptile, the creators of Lethal League, have announced their newest project: Bomb Rush Cyberfunk.
