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Crimson Moon and Nekome: Nazi Hunter Lead ProbablyMonsters’ New Release Slate
ProbablyMonsters has confirmed new release windows for two of its upcoming original games, following hands-on previews at Summer Game Fest Play Days.
Crimson Moon, a Gothic action-adventure RPG built around solo and two-player co-op missions, will launch in September. Nekome: Nazi Hunter, a single-player action game inspired by grindhouse cinema, is now planned for early 2027.
The two games are very different in tone, but they share a similar goal for ProbablyMonsters. Both are being presented as focused AA projects with polished presentation, handcrafted gameplay, and clear genre identities.
Crimson Moon Brings Gothic Co Op Carnage to September
The RPG casts players as a Nephilim, a powerful half-human and half-angel warrior fighting through the demon-infested city of Gildenarch. The game draws from classic fantasy, gothic horror, and metal music, giving its world a heavy, theatrical identity.
The game is built around replayable missions, with players battling through streets, cathedrals, and monstrous enemies using weapons, armour sets, abilities, and character progression. Solo play is supported, but co op adds another layer by letting two players combine their Nephilim abilities for more intense encounters.
Nekome: Nazi Hunter Heads for Early 2027
The action title shifts from gothic fantasy to a Second World War revenge story. Players take on the role of Vano Nastasu, a Romani man pursuing a group of Nazi soldiers across occupied Europe after his family is killed.
The game is structured as a single-player third-person action experience in which players scout routes, plan attacks, and blend stealth with close combat. ProbablyMonsters is leaning into grindhouse cinema influences, but the central hook is personal revenge shaped through tactical encounters and cinematic pacing.
ProbablyMonsters Builds Around Focused AA Games
ProbablyMonsters is describing both titles as part of its wider approach to building original IP through focused development. Crimson Moon and Nekome: Nazi Hunter are not trying to occupy the same lane, which makes the pairing more interesting.
The former is built for gothic power fantasy and shared combat escalation, while the latter is built around precision, revenge, and the tension of moving through enemy territory. Together, they give ProbablyMonsters a clearer identity as a publisher and developer of smaller but strongly defined action games.