Ninja Theory Announces New Senua Action-Adventure Game
- Ninja Theory announced a new action-adventure title titled Senua on June 7, 2026.
- The upcoming title, simply called Senua, represents the latest expansion of the universe established by Ninja Theory.
- Ninja Theory is shifting the mechanical focus for this new title.
Ninja Theory announced a new action-adventure title titled Senua on June 7, 2026. Set within the Hellblade universe, the game introduces expanded gameplay mechanics and a direct approach to action gameplay, according to reports from heise online and GamePro.
What is the new Senua game?
The upcoming title, simply called Senua, represents the latest expansion of the universe established by Ninja Theory. While previous entries in the series were branded under the Hellblade name, GamePro reports that this new installment moves away from that prefix. DailyGame.at describes the project as an action-adventure game that continues the narrative and thematic world of its predecessors.
How does the gameplay differ from previous entries?
Ninja Theory is shifting the mechanical focus for this new title. According to heise online, Senua includes more gameplay mechanics than previous titles in the series. This suggests a broader set of interactions or combat systems than those found in the earlier Hellblade games.

The pacing of the experience is also changing. GamePro notes that Senua starts directly with action gameplay. This is a departure from the atmospheric, slower-paced introductions that characterized the previous games in the universe, placing the player into combat or active engagement more quickly.
Which platforms will support Senua and when is the release?
Although Ninja Theory operates as part of Xbox Game Studios, the title is planned for a multi-platform presence. PlayCentral reports that Senua is scheduled to launch for the PlayStation 5 in 2027.
The decision to bring the title to the PS5 highlights a continuing trend of Xbox Game Studios titles appearing on competing hardware, contrasting with the platform-exclusive nature of many first-party releases from previous years.
