New Batman and Harry Potter games were set for E3 2020, says report

(Image credit: Rocksteady Studios)

E3 2020 has been cancelled, which was largely expected, and it leaves a lot of question marks about what happens to all the big announcements that were scheduled for the event this June. Three of those reveals were set to be a new Batman game, a new Harry Potter game and the next project by Rocksteady Studios, based on a new report. 

According to Kotaku in covering the event's cancelation, Warner Bros was set to reveal the games as part of its own E3 press conference. All three games were known about in some capacity, but unannounced – the Harry Potter game was subject to a leak back in 2018, where it was suggested it'd be some kind of RPG from developer WB Games Avalanche. A new Batman game from Warner Bros Montreal has been teased since last year.

Rocksteady's next game, meanwhile, has been long in the works, but little is known about that project. Its last title, Batman: Arkham VR, was released all the way back in 2016, so it was about time we saw what the London-based developer had going on. 

It's possible we could see the games announced at another venue – but the developing situation with coronavirus makes it hard to predict what's going to happen to the games industry in the next few months.

What next?

These titles are all big enough to warrant their own event, and even if that has to be a livestreamed event without the E3 part, people will absolutely want to see them revealed. New Batman and Harry Potter games are a huge deal, and Rocksteady's next project has been the subject of intense speculation.

In the meantime, publishers are starting to announce digital events to compensate for E3's cancelation. Microsoft has confirmed it'll "celebrate the next generation of gaming" with its own show, with details TBA. That's where we'll find out more about the Xbox Series X.

Samuel Roberts

Samuel is a PR Manager at game developer Frontier. Formerly TechRadar's Senior Entertainment Editor, he's an expert in Marvel, Star Wars, Netflix shows and general streaming stuff. Before his stint at TechRadar, he spent six years at PC Gamer. Samuel is also the co-host of the popular Back Page podcast, in which he details the trials and tribulations of being a games magazine editor – and attempts to justify his impulsive eBay games buying binges.

Latest in Consoles & PC
Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Con up-close from app store
Nintendo's new app gave us another look at the Switch 2, and there's something different with the Joy-Con
Nintendo Music teaser art
Nintendo Music expands its library with songs from Kirby and the Forgotten Land and Tetris
Image of Naoe in AC Shadows
Assassin's Creed Shadows is hands-down one of the most beautiful PC ports I've ever seen
Image of AC Shadows cover art & Steam Deck
It's not perfect, but Assassin's Creed Shadows' performance is impressive - it runs smoothly on the Steam Deck and Asus ROG Ally
Steam Deck OLED in limited edition white color
With a single update SteamOS could turbocharge handheld PCs – here's how
Samus Aran leaping through space
Metroid Prime 4 tipped to be at the heart of April's Nintendo Switch 2 deep-dive
Latest in News
Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Con up-close from app store
Nintendo's new app gave us another look at the Switch 2, and there's something different with the Joy-Con
cheap Nintendo Switch game deals sales
Nintendo didn't anticipate that Mario Kart 8 Deluxe was 'going to be the juggernaut' for the Nintendo Switch when it was ported to the console, according to former employees
Three angles of the Apple MacBook Air 15-inch M4 laptop above a desk
Apple MacBook Air 15-inch (M4) review roundup – should you buy Apple's new lightweight laptop?
Witchbrook
Witchbrook, the life-sim I've been waiting years for, finally has a release window and it's sooner than you think
Amazon Echo Smart Speaker
Amazon is experimenting with renaming Echo speakers to Alexa speakers, and it's about time
Shigeru Miyamoto presents Nintendo Today app
Nintendo Today smartphone app is out now on iOS and Android devices – and here's what it does