Pixels in Space
newsApril 10, 20266 min read
Share

Pragmata Preview: Capcom's Six-Year Journey Finally Reaches Its Destination

After six years of delays, Capcom's sci-fi action-adventure Pragmata arrives on April 17. We went hands-on with the lunar thriller and came away genuinely impressed by its combat, atmosphere, and the dynamic between its two leads.

Pragmata Preview: Capcom's Six-Year Journey Finally Reaches Its Destination

There are games that get announced, disappear for years, and then resurface to thunderous skepticism. Pragmata is one of those games. First revealed at Sony's PlayStation 5 showcase in June 2020 with a striking trailer showing a suited spacefarer and a mysterious android child navigating a crumbling New York City, the game promptly vanished from public view for years. Every time it surfaced, it brought a new delay and renewed doubt from an audience that had learned not to hold its breath. Now, six years after that initial reveal, Pragmata is arriving on April 17, 2026, for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC via Steam. Having spent time with a preview build, the wait appears to have been justified.

Developed by Capcom, the studio behind Resident Evil, Devil May Cry, and Monster Hunter, Pragmata carries significant pedigree. Capcom has been on one of the most remarkable hot streaks in gaming over the past decade, releasing hit after hit and rebuilding its reputation as one of the most reliable developers in the industry. Pragmata represents a different kind of ambition for the studio: a brand-new IP set in a science fiction world, leaning into action-adventure territory rather than the horror or action-spectacle genres that Capcom is best known for. The result, based on preview impressions, is something genuinely interesting and unlike anything the studio has released before.

Pragmata gameplay on lunar research station

The World of Pragmata

Pragmata is set on a lunar research station in the near future, a time when humanity has established a permanent presence on the Moon but has lost something in the process. The station, once a hub of scientific achievement, has been taken over by IDUS, a hostile artificial intelligence that has turned the facility's systems against its human inhabitants. The game follows Hugh Williams, a spacefarer stranded on the station after an incident leaves him cut off from Earth, and Diana, an android he discovers in the early hours of the game whose capabilities are central to the mystery the story is built around.

The relationship between Hugh and Diana is the emotional core of what Pragmata is selling. Hugh is a gruff, competent professional who has clearly seen difficult things and carries that weight quietly. Diana is curious, precise, and operating with a purpose she does not fully understand. Their dynamic, as shown in previews, has genuine chemistry. Diana comments on the world around her with an analytical perspective that provides useful information while also creating character moments. Hugh responds with the kind of dry pragmatism that makes him immediately readable as a person without requiring lengthy exposition about his history. The writing feels confident in ways that suggest Capcom has spent a significant portion of those six years getting these two characters exactly right.

Pragmata character exploration environment

Combat and Traversal

Pragmata is primarily an action-adventure game with Metroidvania-influenced structure. The lunar station is one large interconnected environment that you explore progressively, unlocking new areas as you acquire abilities and find solutions to the obstacles IDUS has placed throughout the facility. Combat encounters punctuate the exploration, using a system that blends conventional gunplay with Diana's hacking abilities and the environmental interactions that the lunar setting enables. Combat in low gravity sections feels noticeably different from areas where the station's artificial gravity systems are functional, with movement options that change the tactical possibilities significantly.

The hacking system, which uses Diana's android capabilities to interface with station systems and enemy machines, adds a layer of strategic depth to what might otherwise be straightforward shootouts. Certain enemies can be compromised mid-combat, turning them temporarily against their allies or exposing weaknesses for follow-up attacks. Environmental systems can be hacked to create advantages: venting atmosphere from sealed sections, cutting power to defensive turrets, or redirecting maintenance robots into enemy positions. The preview build showed a combat flow that rewards experimentation and creativity without punishing players who prefer a more direct approach.

Pragmata combat and action sequence

Visual Design and Atmosphere

Pragmata is a visually striking game. The lunar station has the kind of detailed, lived-in design that makes exploration feel like archaeology: every corridor tells a story about what the facility was before IDUS took over, and the contrast between the cold, functional spaces that IDUS controls and the warmer remnants of human occupation creates a compelling environmental narrative. The game runs on Capcom's RE Engine, which has proven itself one of the most capable engines in the industry across the Resident Evil remakes and Devil May Cry 5, and the results are consistently impressive. Lighting in particular does a great deal of work, using the harsh contrast of lunar shadows and artificial illumination to create spaces that feel genuinely tense to move through.

The outdoor sections of the lunar surface stand apart from anything else in the game. Walking across the Moon with the Earth hanging enormous in the sky above you, your spacesuit's helmet display reflecting the stars, is one of the more genuinely awe-inspiring visual moments shown in the previews. These sections serve as breathing space between the claustrophobic interiors, and they are beautiful enough to make you want to linger even when the mission demands you keep moving.

What to Expect on April 17

Pragmata is shaping up to be exactly the kind of game that Capcom does best: mechanically refined, visually confident, and built on a strong central relationship that gives the player a reason to care about what happens beyond the moment-to-moment gameplay. Six years is a long time to wait for a game, and there is always the risk that accumulated expectations create a gap that no release can bridge. Based on preview impressions, Pragmata is not trying to be everything the hype suggested it might be. It is trying to be a focused, well-crafted action-adventure game with excellent art direction and two compelling leads. That is a smaller ambition than some might have hoped for, and a much more achievable one.

A free demo is also available now for those who want to try before committing. Capcom released the demo alongside the announcement of the final release date, and it covers the opening section of the game in enough depth to give a genuine sense of what the full release offers. Our full review will be live on April 17.

Comments

Leave a comment

0/1000

Loading comments...

More Stories