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Miss Universe: The Video Game
Developer(s)Ubisoft Reflections[a]
Publisher(s)Ubisoft
EngineSnowdrop
Platform(s)PlayStation 5
Windows
Xbox Series X/S
Release2024-2025
Genre(s)Adventure, business simulation
Mode(s)Single player, multiplayer

Miss Universe: The Video Game is a video game based on the Miss Universe pageant being developed by Ubisoft Reflections and published by Ubisoft for PlayStation 5, Windows and Xbox Series X/S. It is set for release during Ubisoft's 2025 fiscal year (April 2024-March 2025).

Two other Miss Universe video games were in development by EA Black Box and Activision but were cancelled due to various reasons. In 2021, Ubisoft acquired the Miss Universe license, before the organization was purchased by JKN Global Group.

Gameplay[edit]

In the single-player mode, players assume the role of a beauty queen created by them, which would also allow several customization options, including the ability to create transgender and non-binary characters.

Multiplayer modes would consist of 100 player scheduled pageants, with the ability to play as select Miss Universe, Miss USA and Miss Teen USA delegates licensed for the game, including past winners and runners-up.

Playable characters[edit]

The following licensed delegates have been confirmed to be playable in the game[b]:

Plot[edit]

Structured as a coming of age story, it is set around the player’s beauty queen (voiced by Amelie Bea Smith (teenager) and Marelisa Gibson (adult)) as she tries to participate at the three Miss Universe Organization pageants (Miss Universe, Miss USA and Miss Teen USA), while overcoming various life obstacles.

Development[edit]

Activision version[edit]

In 2007, it was reported that Krome Studios was developing a Miss Universe game for Wii, PlayStation 2 and Nintendo DS, with Activision publishing. The title was later cancelled for undisclosed reasons.

EA Black Box original version[edit]

In 2014, a Miss Universe game was revealed unofficially as under development at Electronic Arts' Black Box studio using DICE's Frostbite engine.[1] However, on April 2013, Black Box was closed down, leaving the game in limbo. As of 2015, the game has yet-to-be officially cancelled and development status is uncertain.

It was reported that the game’s official reveal, which was planned for Microsoft’s E3 2015 press conference for a late 2016 release on PC and eighth generation consoles, was cancelled following then-Miss Universe owner Donald Trump’s remarks regarding Mexican immigrants during Trump's speech announcing his candidacy for the Republican nomination for U.S. President on June 16, 2015 in New York City led NBC, which had broadcast the pageant since 2003, and incumbent rights holders Univision Communications and Televisa to terminate their relationships with the organization and Trump himself, with Farouk Systems, Electronic Arts and Microsoft, who held exclusive streaming rights to the Miss Teen USA pageant for Xbox consoles from 2012-16, ending their business ties with the organization.

Under Ubisoft[edit]

On November 5, 2021, it was announced that Ubisoft entered a strategic partnership with then-Miss Universe owners IMG to produce interactive media based on the Miss Universe pageants. Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot stated the partnership was conceived as a result of the company’s efforts to diversify their core game lineup as well as to appeal to the casual gaming market. Ubisoft's troubles with a mid-2020 series of sexual misconduct allegations raised against many high-level members of the company also played a role in this decision. Despite the Miss Universe Organization’s 2022 acquisition by JKN Global Group, Ubisoft retained the Miss Universe licensing rights.

On November 18, 2023, during a press conference at the 2023 pageant, the game was officially announced as under development by Ubisoft Reflections, with additional contributions by Ubisoft's Annecy, Belgrade, Düsseldorf, Kyiv, Leamington, Massive, Montpellier, Paris, Shanghai, and Toronto studios, using Massive's Snowdrop engine. It was later reported that the Miss Universe title was mentioned as the “large game” announced at Ubisoft’s investor calls during 2023, which was delayed to the company’s fiscal year 2025 slate (April 2024-March 2025).[2][3]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]