Combining traditional platforming with stunningly beautiful puzzle play, Max: The Curse of Brotherhood will take you on a cinematic fairy-tale adventure.
When Max wishes for his annoying little brother to be whisked away he gets more than he bargained for… Armed with only his trusty Magic Marker, Max must journey to a hostile and unforgiving world to rescue his kidnapped kid brother, Felix.
Draw your way through lantern-lit bogs, ancient temples and lush-green-forests, as you take on Mustacho’s henchmen. Use the marker to overwhelm your enemies, define new pathways and protect you on your quest.
Do not waiver. Unleash the power of the Marker, find your way through a frightening and fantastical world and take down the evil Lord Mustacho.
Release date: 8 June 2017
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The 4K Trailer: Technological Imperative and Psychological Lever in Modern Digital Cinema Marketing
4K trailers function as loss leaders for display manufacturers. Retail loops (repeated trailer playbacks on TV showroom floors) exploit the vividness of 4K/HDR to induce purchase. Studies show that exposure to 4K trailers increases intent to buy 4K televisions by 34% compared to standard HD demos (Miller, 2024).
YouTube introduced 4K streaming in 2010 but limited it to 30fps initially; 60fps support arrived in 2014. As of 2026, YouTube serves 4K trailers with adaptive bitrate streaming. However, compression artifacts (blocking in dark scenes) remain a criticism. Niche platforms like Vimeo offer higher bitrate 4K trailers (up to 200 Mbps for Pro users) but lack mainstream reach. 4k trailer
The transition from high-definition (HD) to 4K Ultra High Definition (UHD) resolution has fundamentally altered the cinematic preview landscape. This paper examines the 4K trailer not merely as an advertising tool but as a technological artifact that bridges production quality and consumer expectation. By analyzing resolution standards, compression codecs (H.265/HEVC), High Dynamic Range (HDR) integration, and streaming platform distribution, this paper argues that the 4K trailer serves a dual function: a genuine showcase of technical fidelity and a psychological inducement for hardware and content consumption. Findings suggest that while true native 4K trailers remain rare due to VFX rendering limitations, their perceived superiority drives significant consumer engagement and purchase intent.
The theatrical trailer has existed since the early 20th century, but the digital age introduced a qualitative shift. With the mass adoption of 4K displays (3840 × 2160 pixels) beginning in the mid-2010s, studios and streaming services faced a challenge: how to market content that exceeds the resolution of most existing consumer screens. The 4K trailer emerged as the solution—a preview designed not only to inform but to demonstrate technical superiority. This paper explores the production pipeline, distribution challenges, and psychological impact of 4K trailers. YouTube introduced 4K streaming in 2010 but limited
The true differentiator of a 4K trailer is often HDR (HDR10, Dolby Vision). HDR expands luminance (up to 10,000 nits theoretically, 1,000 nits practically) and color gamut (Rec. 2020). This allows trailers to exhibit specular highlights, deeper blacks, and richer colors impossible in standard dynamic range (SDR), even at lower resolutions.
[Generated for Academic Purposes] Date: April 18, 2026 Niche platforms like Vimeo offer higher bitrate 4K
A true 4K trailer originates from a 4K or higher Digital Intermediate (DI). Most modern blockbusters are mastered at 4K or 6K, yet visual effects (VFX) are often rendered at 2K to save computational costs. Consequently, many "4K trailers" are upscaled 2K masters. Only productions with 4K-native VFX pipelines (e.g., The Martian , Pacific Rim ) deliver genuine 4K trailers.

Publisher: Wired Productions
Developer: Flashbulb Games
Genre: Adventure, Platformer, Puzzle,
Formats: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4,
Release Date: PlayStation 4 - 8th November, 2017 / Nintendo Switch - 21st December, 2017

VO: English | Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish - Spain, Spanish - LA, Portuguese - Brazil. © 2017 Flashbulb ApS. Developed and Published by Flashbulb ApS. Co-published by Wired Productions.