Since “What’s Next” is a little clickbaity in the title, here is the relevant portion of what I pulled from the article.

With all that time and money and magic spent on the game, Haddad and Co. are already working on follow-up additions to the Potterverse’s video game world. That includes the previously announced title featuring Quidditch (the wizard sport that was left out of “Hogwarts Legacy,” to fans’ chagrin), which is currently in the beta-testing phase, but also “a series of other things” that are currently unannounced and “will let the fans be part of this world and stories and characters in deeper and deeper ways,” Haddad says.

“We don’t have any particular announcements on exactly how and when [the Quidditch game] is going to come to the market, but we are working to get it designed in a way just to delight fans,” Haddad said.

Coming up, Warner Bros. Games will be launching “Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League” on Feb. 2, which Haddad calls “one of our most ambitious projects ever,” and the wide release for free-to-play brawler game “MultiVersus,” which features Warner Bros.-owned characters ready to battle. Looking ahead further, the studio has a single-player open-world action Wonder Woman game in the works, as well as games that will be canon additions to James Gunn and Peter Safran’s planned relaunch of the DC Universe.

During Warner Bros. Discovery’s Q3 earnings call in November, Zaslav noted the new focus is “on transforming our biggest franchises from largely console- and PC-based with 3-to-4-year release schedules to include more always-on game play through live services, multi-platform and free-to-play extensions with the goal to have more players spending more time on more platforms.”