
After months of waiting and hopeful speculation, D3Publisher has officially announced that Earth Defense Force 3 Portable will be hitting American shores at some point during the upcoming winter. This news was relayed via the game’s official American Twitter account, which simply states, “Earth Defense Force 2017 Portable Coming to North America for PlayStation Vita!” There’s a link there to the game’s official Facebook page, but that site only brings up an image with similarly exciting, yet ultimately informationless text.

While we have yet to receive that game, Sandlot was tapped to bring Earth Defense Force 2017 to a handheld system. Specifically, Sony’s PS Vita. Instead of a direct port however, Earth Defense Force 3 Portable would be something of a remix of the original game. It improves the title’s graphics, cleans up a few of the more egregious software bugs, adds new levels and weapons, and resurrects the “Pale Wing” character class from Global Defense Force (which, for the record, is the game that would have served as Earth Defense Force 2, except that the series has a really bizarre, confusing history when making the transition from its original Japanese iterations into English-language titles). Most crucially however, the Vita version of Earth Defense Force 3 Portable includes both local and online multiplayer modes, allowing gamers to multiply their bug-exploding potential by however many Vita-owning friends they can round up.
At the moment we have no indication on when Earth Defense Force 3 Portable might hit store shelves, but given the relatively small amount of text included in earlier Earth Defense Force titles, we can’t imagine that the game’s localization process would take an exceedingly long time. That, combined with the fact that the Japanese version of Earth Defense Force 3 Portable just hit that country’s retail outlets, leads us to believe that D3Publisher will have more information on the imminent English port sooner, rather than later. This is, after all, the company’s flagship series, so don’t expect them to let us forget that it’s on its way to this side of the Pacific.