
andriasang writes:
"American games market, acquiring additional shares in its XSEED JKS subsidiary and also increasing staff.
The Nikkei Sangyou Shimbun reported today that AQ has increased its stake in XSEED from 55% to 90%. This amounts to a purchase of 298,000 shares, totaling around 50 million yen.
AQ plans on increasing the subsidiary's man power from its present nine to eleven or twelve. The increases will come in the marketing and producer fields."

Den of Geek writes: "Ju-On is a seriously scary film. Fact. Oh sure, it might be your good old 'vengeful spirit in haunted house' flick, but it's directed by Takashi Shimizu, responsible for not only the Japanese Ju-On series but a stack of other haunted shenanigans including the surprisingly decent American remakes.
He's also responsible for this game."

Guardian writes: "At a time when the Wii's Achilles heel is its lack of good quality third-party titles that aren't lightgun games, it's depressing to come across a new release that suffers from a total failure to harness any of the trump cards Nintendo's machine holds over its HD rivals."

GamingUnion.net: "Ju-On: The Grudge has an interesting premise, allowing players to only defend themselves against Toshio and Kayako. However, it tries to ruin this premise at every opportunity. The story lacks any real substance, and the controls make the game very tedious and boring. On top of this, it's also exceedingly short and with no real replay value this should only be recommend to the hardest of hardcore fans of the movie. Everyone else will probably be left wondering what they are actually playing, and why they are still playing it."
Quicktime-only fights? With the wiimote as the only input?
Sounds like a pity 2.
Now bring us Fragile please.