• @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    The article talks about factors like type of game and advancements in technology, but doesn’t mention what is surely a big factor - the age of their audience.

    My personal intuition is that 10 to 20 years is the sweet spot because those people who played the original as a teenager will now be in their 20s and 30s, where they have disposable income and plenty of desire to spend it on reliving those happy childhood memories.

    If you wait too long for a remake, the market will shrink again because those original players will be more likely to have family, other commitments, and less time to game.

  • Stopthatgirl7
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    73 months ago

    Yup! Now, can we please, please, please get a remake or at least a remaster of Dragon Age Origins?! Please?

      • Stopthatgirl7
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        23 months ago

        You’d think they’d try to get one out before Dreadwolf, but there’s not even a whisper about it.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 months ago

          As I understand it Dreadwolf is like Andromeda in that it’s the same universe but not a continuation of the story, or even tightly related. But I can’t say I’ve followed it too closely. As such there’s no rush to get a Legendary edition out before it. I’d plan it for 2-3 years or so after Dreadwolf to keep the franchise in people’s minds.

  • @[email protected]
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    63 months ago

    Games that are more than 30 years old can be remade. The key to a good remake is to not make too many changes that deviate too greatly from the original. Or, if a developer does that, to make the changes optional and give players the choice. Basically a remake should preserve the original with improved fidelity, but also offer any changes as optional content to the player.

    Resident Evil (Gamecube/HD) made minimal changes but kept the game mostly the same, utilizing graphical fidelity increases on the base gameplay. I think the remake was done pretty well. It didn’t offer anything optional but game remakes were pretty new when it cane out so I don’t hold it against Capcom.

    In comparison, I have serious concern for Bloober’s upcoming Silent Hill 2 remake (aside from the developers obvious subpar history). Ditching the traditional Silent Hill camera to copy RE remakes and the worst Silent Hill games (and not making the over the shoulder perspective optional) is a major change to the stylistic presentation of the game and shifts the focus of gameplay too much onto combat. With such a major change, I can only imagine what other changes Konami is forcing that will destroy it even worse. I mean, Silent Hill Ascension and The Short Message both did mostly well with music and visuals/atmosphere, but the writing was absolutely atrocious in both of them.