More information has emerged about Uncharted: Fight For Fortune . Thanks to NeoGAF user videtonator , we now know that the game has been rated elsewhere, namely in Brazil . And the Brazilian listing teaches us a bit more about the nature of Fight For Fortune.

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The platform of the game is listed as PlayStation Vita, dispelling the notion (mentioned below) that the game could possibly be cross-play between PS3 and Vita. And its category is listed as a casino or card game.When that information is combined with what we garnered from the Australian listing – namely that its rated acceptable for everyone – as well as the rather literal nature of the game, it’s safe to assume we have an Uncharted card game on our hands. But we’ll have to wait and see what Sony has to say, as they’ve yet to respond to our inquiry for comment, clarification and confirmation.The original story is below the video.

It looks like PlayStation gamers will be getting more Nathan Drake. Why? Because the Australian Classifications Board seems to have unveiled a new game in the Uncharted series.Multiple sources have reported on the seemingly unintentional reveal, most notably GameSpot , which was re-Tweeted by Sony executive Shuhei Yoshida, all but verifying that the game is real.So what does the classification listing tell us? Well, quite a bit, as it turns out.For starters, the publisher, not surprisingly, is Sony Computer Entertainment, which owns the Uncharted franchise. What’s strange here is that the developer of Fight For Fortune is a studio One Loop Games. The Uncharted trilogy on PlayStation 3, as well as the PlayStation Vita iteration in the series, were developed in-house by Sony-owned developers Naughty Dog and Sony Bend, respectively. It appears this entry will leave the first party development stable. One Loop Games’ website shows a picture of both an Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. The company claims its “team has over 30 years of interactive entertainment experience behind it,” with projects having appeared on XBLA, PSN, and elsewhere. Interestingly, the studio worked on God of War: Betrayal and Ratchet & Clank: Going Commando, indicating it already has a relationship with Sony. The studio also had a hand in the development of consoles games like Full Spectrum Warrior and The Saboteur.The rating also indicates that Fight For Fortune may not be your typical Uncharted game. Australian games are rated in six categories: Themes, Violence, Language, Drug Use, Nudity and Sex. Each of those categories can be ranked from “none” to “high impact”, with four other classifications in between. Fight For Fortune scores a “none” in Themes, Language, Nudity and Sex, with “very mild impact”, the next step up from “none”, in Violence and Drug Use. (Its overall rating -- G -- indicates a "General" game with "content... very mild in impact.")Now, Drake and his friends have never been known for running around naked or using drugs -- so there are no surprises on that front -- but the four Uncharted games have, so far, relied a great deal on death-by-gun. So perhaps Fight For Fortune is something that deviates from the Uncharted formula. We'll have to wait and see.Interestingly, the game is also listed as being multi-platform. Since Sony owns Uncharted and is publishing the game, this could very well indicate that Fight For Fortune is a cross-play PS3/Vita game. Or perhaps it’s a PS3/next-gen game. Again, we'll have to wait and see.We’ve reached out to Sony for official comment, and will update when we hear back.

Colin Moriarty is an IGN PlayStation editor. You can follow him on Twitter and IGN and learn just how sad the life of a New York Islanders and New York Jets fan can be.