2025 continues to surprise with Quentin Tarantino news.

This time, we've learned that a video game will complete a Quentin Tarantino movie that came out over two decades ago.


Fortnite's Chapter 7 launches Nov. 30, and it's kicking things off with something unprecedented in the crossover between gaming and film. The season will feature "Yuki's Revenge," a lost chapter from Kill Bill that Tarantino wrote back in 2003 but never filmed.

According to Kotaku, both Tarantino and Uma Thurman showed up at an event at the Vista Theatre in Los Angeles to unveil this collaboration.

The lost chapter will focus on Yuki Yubari, the sister of Gogo Yubari (that terrifying schoolgirl with the chain and ball who fought The Bride in the Vol. 1 restaurant).

In Tarantino's original script, Yuki travels to the United States hunting for revenge after her sister's death, leading to a showdown with Black Mamba that ends with the destruction of the iconic Pussy Wagon.

This content was supposed to be Chapter 5 of Kill Bill Vol. 1, but it never made the final cut. Now Epic Games is bringing it to life through Fortnite, complete with skins for The Bride, Gogo, and Yuki.


The timing comes on the heels of another QT announcement. Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair is getting a nationwide theatrical release on Dec. 5.

This four-hour version unites both volumes into a single film, the way Tarantino originally intended, and includes a never-before-seen anime sequence. But since Yuki's Revenge was never actually filmed in live-action, it makes sense that it would need a different medium to finally see the light of day.

The crossover is not the first this year. Disney invested more than a billion dollars in Fortnite creator Epic Games in 2024. That's why we just had that huge Simpsons tie-in.

Epic had to build Yuki from scratch using only Tarantino's script notes, since the character never appeared in the finished films. Gogo's design can pull directly from the movie, but Yuki had to be imagined entirely for this project.

Whether this plays out as a storyline event within the game or as some kind of in-game cinematic remains unclear.

But either way, we're watching a video game actively contribute to a filmmaker's canon in a way that's never really happened before.

Are you excited for this?