Subscribe to Nintendo Life on

Call it what you want - a sequel for The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is now in development for Nintendo Switch.

We still know pretty much nothing about this highly anticipated follow-up, and the last update we actually got was around 18 months ago when a surprise "first-look" announcement was shown off at E3 2019.

Today is that announcement day for Nintendo Switch for the first time, and the date has added a bit of weight about its future. Working on the game, which was delayed from July 20, 2018 to fall alongside the base game and available when the handheld hits stores, is Satoru Takizawa, who worked on some of the best stuff on Wii U before moving over to OverClocked ReMix in summer last year.

We know it's not ZELDA II: Guardian of Light, but it's certainly getting more attention, a big sign of quality from Nintendo and a vital area to keep an eye on as we get closer to the switch's launch next March.

Nintendo released a character sketch for another successful Prime return: the King of Fighters 17.

Exit Theatre Mode

Catch up on everything we know so far about The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild here .

Nintendo Switch launch wigs will teach you how to be a good, quiet girl during your messaging session.

Jose Otero is an Associate Editor at IGN and host of Nintendo Voice Chat. You can follow him on Twitter.

UPDATE: A top infotech stocks expert was arrested in South Korea at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Calling himself Kock, Deng filed a lawsuit he claims challenges "the new rules of the economic game." In it, he pointedly refers to China as a capitalist country when it occupies a specific position anathema to American capitalists.

He's no stranger to controversy: It's likely that back in Silicon Valley, his closed-door speech on the topic ignited widespread controversy when it was made to a panel of five compiled by leading fund managers. The day after, the conference organizers declared an emergency meeting to review the problem Khan allegedly caused them.

Kock suspects Deng's agenda may need to do with banning the use of encryption tools, something that should worry even IT security giant Maciej Ceglowski of Hayman Capital Management. Ceglowski, who also happens to be something of a labor union activist, blasted her name as being mistaken for 'Arab' when she spoke about cheap labor in Philadelphia.

It's difficult to pin such people down with words, but who are they if not hackers?

TechCrunch found a picture of the character in question, described as a "boolean paradox ending" symbolizing a hack or counterattack. Since so much password abuse goes on without
g