The next major contender in the open-world action RPG space is less than two weeks away from launch. NTE: Neverness to Everness, the supernatural urban RPG from Hotta Studio and Perfect World Games, is set to release on April 29 across iOS, Android, PlayStation 5, PC, and Mac with full cross-platform play from day one. With over 20 million pre-registrations already locked in and a final beta test that generated overwhelmingly positive feedback, NTE is shaping up to be one of the biggest mobile game launches of 2026.
Built on Unreal Engine 5, NTE drops players into Hethereau, a sprawling modern city where the ordinary and the supernatural coexist in uneasy tension. You play as an Appraiser, someone who can see and interact with anomalies that the rest of the population cannot, and your job is to investigate paranormal incidents across a massive open world that stretches from neon-lit downtown streets to underground tunnels and rooftop observation decks.
The trailer above gives a taste of the game's visual ambition. NTE's art direction blends anime-inspired character designs with photorealistic urban environments in a way that feels distinct from both Genshin Impact and Tower of Fantasy, the latter of which was also developed by Hotta Studio. Where those games leaned into fantasy and science fiction respectively, NTE grounds itself in a recognizable modern setting before layering on the supernatural elements, creating an aesthetic closer to Persona or the Tokyo sections of a Shin Megami Tensei title than to a traditional open-world gacha game.
Combat That Breaks the Mold
Perhaps the most talked-about aspect of NTE is its combat system, which departs significantly from the formula established by Genshin Impact and its many imitators. Instead of cycling through elemental skill rotations and swapping characters to trigger reactions, NTE uses a real-time action system that draws more from character action games like Devil May Cry and Bayonetta. Characters have distinct light attack chains, heavy attacks with different properties, aerial combos that can be extended with well-timed inputs, dodge counters that reward precise timing, and ultimate abilities that play out in cinematic sequences.
The character-swap system is still present, as players build teams of multiple Espers, each with unique abilities and fighting styles, but the emphasis is on fluid, responsive combat rather than number-crunching optimization. Beta testers consistently praised the weight and impact of the combat, noting that it feels considerably more hands-on and skill-based than most games in the genre.
A Living City
Open-world gacha games have traditionally struggled with making their worlds feel alive between combat encounters. NTE addresses this head-on with a suite of activities that extend well beyond fighting. Players can drive and customize vehicles, from compact city cars to sports machines, and use them to navigate the city at speed. There are shops and businesses to interact with, side stories that unfold through environmental storytelling and NPC conversations, and a day-night cycle that changes both the visual atmosphere and the types of anomalies that appear.
The vertical exploration is another standout feature. Unlike most open-world mobile games, where buildings are largely decorative backdrops, NTE allows players to scale buildings, glide between skyscrapers, and enter interiors that would typically be locked behind loading screens. The result is a city that feels genuinely three-dimensional and explorable in a way that mobile gamers have rarely experienced.
Free-to-Play With Gacha
NTE follows the free-to-play gacha model, meaning players can download and play the full game at no cost but will encounter a character-collection system monetized through premium currency. Hotta Studio has reportedly taken feedback from Tower of Fantasy's launch issues seriously and has implemented more generous pull rates and a clearer pity system for NTE's gacha mechanics. The final beta test included several player-friendly features, including a guaranteed banner character within a set number of pulls and a currency system that rewards consistent play.
The cross-platform support is a significant selling point. NTE will launch simultaneously on iOS, Android, PS5, PC, and Mac, with all platforms sharing the same servers and progression. Players can start a session on their phone during a commute, pick up where they left off on their PS5 at home, and coordinate with friends regardless of which platform they are using. This level of cross-platform integration at launch is still relatively rare in the mobile RPG space and could give NTE a meaningful advantage in building and retaining its player base.
Launch Day and Beyond
NTE: Neverness to Everness launches globally on April 29, 2026. Pre-registration is open now on all platforms and offers a stack of in-game rewards for players who sign up before launch day. A Launch Preview Stream scheduled for today, April 18, will showcase additional characters, gameplay systems, and launch content.
With 20 million pre-registrations and a polished beta behind it, NTE enters a crowded market from a position of strength. Whether it can sustain that momentum will depend on the quality of its endgame content, the fairness of its monetization, and the studio's ability to deliver regular updates that keep the world of Hethereau feeling fresh. For mobile RPG fans, April 29 cannot come soon enough.
