Mark your calendars: Capcom is returning to the virtual stage with a new Spotlight on June 26 at 3PM PDT. The 40-minute digital broadcast promises updates on upcoming Capcom titles, developer interviews, and—most notably—a fresh look at Monster Hunter Wilds, the highly anticipated sequel set for 2025.

This year’s Spotlight will stream globally with subtitles in 13 languages, which means Capcom expects you to be paying attention no matter where you are. The company hasn’t teased much beyond Wilds, Resident Evil, and Street Fighter, but who knows? There might even be a stray Dragon’s Dogma update.

As always, the lineup may skew mature—so don’t be surprised if some of the titles come age-restricted. The stream will be available on Capcom’s official YouTube and Twitch channels.

Speculation: What’s in the Capcom Cauldron?

One Monster, or a Slew of Them?

Capcom says Monster Hunter Wilds is getting a new update at the end of June—but how much meat is actually on this bone? Early teases promised “multiple new monsters,” but a recent roadmap walked that back to a single “additional monster.” That’s led fans to suspect we’re getting Lagriacrus, a long-requested leviathan that’s been lurking on the edges of every teaser. But Capcom has a track record of under-promising and over-delivering, so the door’s still open for a surprise stampede.

Is Resident Evil Requiem Getting Gameplay?

Resident Evil Requiem made a chilling debut at Summer Game Fest 2025, introducing Grace Ashcroft—daughter of Outbreak’s Alyssa—as the series’ most vulnerable protagonist yet. Set in a grim return to Raccoon City, the demo opens with Grace strung upside down while her blood drains into a glass tank, then spirals into a first-person escape through a crumbling, dimly lit facility. The horror peaks with a grotesque, Goya-esque monster devouring a corpse, sending audiences into full panic. With perspective switching between first and third person and the promise of “our darkest symphony yet,” Requiem looks poised to redefine Resident Evil terror.

Street Fighter 6: Next-Level Moves?

Street Fighter 6 is deep into its glow-up era, now boasting over 5 million copies sold and full tournament certification on the upcoming Switch 2. The recently announced Year 3 DLC lineup—featuring fan favorites like Sagat, C. Viper, and Alex, plus wildcard pick Ingrid—was revealed in true Capcom fashion: via wrestler Kenny Omega cosplaying all four. A massive balance patch kicked off the season, overhauling mechanics and setting the stage for EVO 2025. Add in a teased crossover with K-pop group aespa and you’ve got a fighting game that refuses to sit still, constantly punching above its weight in both esports and pop culture.

Pragmata: A Sci-Fi Mystery With Stage Fright

Remember Pragmata? The astronaut game with the mysterious girl and absolutely no idea when it’s coming out? After ghosting fans for years, it finally resurfaced at the June State of Play with a new “2026” placeholder and not much else. Some fans think Capcom could use the Spotlight to clarify what, if anything, this game is about. Others think Capcom would rather pretend it never happened. Both options seem plausible.

Fighting Games in the Rearview Mirror

Talks of a Capcom Fighting Collection 2 and a Marvel vs. Capcom: Arcade Classics bundle have been floating around since early 2025. Fans are hoping for a formal announcement—or at least proof that these aren’t fever dreams. Cross-play support, rollback netcode, and which versions of MVC make the cut are all open questions. If Capcom’s sitting on that reveal, now would be the time to pull the trigger.

Dragon’s Dogma 2: Expansion, Update, or Long Silence?

Dragon’s Dogma 2 has already sold over three million copies, but post-launch updates have been more bugfix than bombshell. Fans are starved for something—anything—new. Rumors of an expansion, new vocations, or even a hard mode have been quietly circulating, but Capcom’s kept its cards close. Still, this Spotlight would be the perfect place to acknowledge that the world of Vermund isn’t done expanding. Even a vague teaser would go a long way.


Bottom line: Capcom is playing it coy, but the fanbase is reading between every frame. This could be just another Monster Hunter patch—or it could be a full-on lineup reveal. Either way, people will be watching, speculating, and probably screaming into the void come June 26.