Content Continues Below
 

Takaya Imamura, a former Nintendo artist responsible for the design of the Star Fox team, has praised the visuals of the Star Fox 64 remake coming to Nintendo Switch 2.

The artist took to X to comment on how the new title’s graphics fully realize how he pictured Star Fox looking back in the ‘90s.

 

 

“The new game looks exactly like the images I had in my head back when I was making Star Fox 64!” Imamura said (via machine translation).

“I also absolutely love the ultra-realistic character designs. That said, Fox in the movie is just too cute.”

 

Last week, Imamura said he preferred Fox’s design in The Super Mario Galaxy Movie over the 64 remake’s version, but praised both approaches to the character.

 

“Personally, I prefer the movie version, but I thought this one was good in its own way because it has a clear direction!” he said on X (via machine translation).

 

Imamura previously stated how he was “overwhelmed with emotion” upon seeing McCloud appear in the film.

The artist designed the entire cast of 1993’s Star Fox, including Fox McCloud, Peppy Hare, Slippy Toad, and Falco Lombardi. Imamura is also responsible for the designs of F-Zero’s Captain Falcon and The Legend of Zelda’s Tingle. He worked on many Star Fox and F-Zero games before retiring from Nintendo in 2021.

The new title, simply called “Star Fox,” will launch exclusively on Nintendo Switch 2 on June 25th, 2026.

 

Check out more Star Fox content

 

10 tracks from the upcoming Star Fox game have been added to Nintendo Music

 

Nintendo confirms Star Fox will be cheaper digitally than physically

 

Star Fox plush toys inbound for Japan in late June

 

Leave a Comment

Written by Reece Heather

A veteran Zelda Universe editor and First-class journalism graduate, Reece emerged with a Nintendo 64 and a lifelong obsession after a narrow escape from Santa’s Naughty List in 1998. Outside of games, he’s reading Punisher comics, being bossed around by his cocker spaniel, and cornering innocent bystanders to rant about the importance of game preservation.


Manage Cookie Settings Manage Consent