| Pitfall | Why It Happens | How to Avoid | |---------|----------------|--------------| | | Fan creators often make high‑quality art that looks “official”. | Look for watermarks, author bios, or platform verification (e.g., a dev’s tweet sharing the art). | | Relying on a single, possibly outdated source | Early rumors can persist long after being retracted. | Always check the date and cross‑check with newer posts. | | Over‑looking regional releases | Some crossovers launch only in specific regions (e.g., Japan‑only DLC). | Add regional keywords ( JP , EU , NA ) to your searches. | | Getting lost in the sea of “crossover” memes | Memes can reference the characters together without any actual in‑game link. | Separate “meme” results (usually image‑only) from “announcement” results (text with dates). |
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Records from industry databases like IAFD and Data18 show the studio was most active between 2008 and 2012 . | Pitfall | Why It Happens | How
[ ] Search Google with site-specific operators. [ ] Scan official dev/publisher sites for press releases. [ ] Browse relevant fandom wikis → locate “crossover” sections. [ ] Check Twitter/X, YouTube, TikTok for recent posts. [ ] Verify with at least two independent sources. [ ] Document URLs, dates, and claims in a simple table. [ ] If official confirmation is missing, treat the link as fan‑speculation. | Always check the date and cross‑check with newer posts