"Renewed". A.k.a, a straight port of a PSP entry whose visuals were worse than the game it remade them from.
Why, so you can be right back here complaining that you "have" to pay 60 dollars again to get a couple new features?
Also Nintendo helped fund the creation of the definitive version. It wouldn't EXIST without them.
Yes, because changing the series from "game filled with popular 2006 gaming tropes" to "game filled with every 2018 AAA gaming cliche" reeks of ambition.
LMAO wut? The graphics were next to the last issue people had with it. The non-existent roster, DLC plans, and tailoring to casuals were the focal points of criticism.
You might have a point if Fornite was an Xbox exclusive, but it's not. For as undeniably popular as it is, it's on numerous consoles and platforms. If one of the only exclusive games coming to Xbone, can't top it on even that one platform for a week or two, that's pretty pathetic.
I don't think it has anything to do with exclusivity. It's more that people placed their judgment on the game when it was announced, and aren't willing to accept they might have been wrong, and that Square is doing it justice.
Placing second half stuff in the first half is kind of my biggest fear too. Namely Sephiroth. I thought part of why he really clicked as a villain, was that he didn't even come into the fold until the tail end of the first half. And they've already show him to appear in Cloud's "visions" numerous times.
Terrible? Xenoblade's graphics were some of the best the wii and 3ds had to offer.
I loved Sunshine, but it's notoriously the "least" popular of the 3d Mario sandbox style games. What would the incentive be for Nintendo to make a sequel to it, over the likes of 64, Galaxy, or Odyssey itself?
Does it have a mixed reception? From everything I've seen, it was regarded as a return to form for the series, especially after the cluster that were the Wii U entries.
What are you talking about? The "realistic" direction was started by Yukes as far back as Smackdown vs Raw 2006. 2K merely continued using that direction and engine.
Lol, FF10 is the definition of mediocre. Didn't remotely attempt to improve any aspect of the formula.
Character designs, Plot points, and the battle system were all retreads of anything Square thought was popular before.
Another spiky haired blonde protagonist, another ATB battle system, another central love story, yawn.
It's a joke to say FF12 is mediocre, when it dates to change every aspect of the formula, and to say FF10 w...
BS and you know it. MR has a cool gimmick in how you can obtain monsters, and that was it. There was nothing compelling about its world, battle system, music, graphics, or anything other than that gimmick. Even the monster designs in the series were forgettable and lackluster.
There's a reason why it's a dormant franchise and Pokemon is one of the big three along with Mario and Zelda.
While we KNOW nothing, it does seem like a no brainer. The engine is already done, there's a guaranteed consumer base for it...what more could they possibly want?
Not really. The episodic release strategy is only gonna get flack if they don't hold up their end of the deal. IF each release truly is expanded to the size of a regular stand alone rpg, where is the issue? It'd be no different than paying for one 60$ rpg, and then its sequel a couple years later.
It's gotten to the point where I just subconciously drift my mouse to the downvote icon when a EddieNX comment pops up.
Man, the 5 people who loved HD Rumble are going to be PISSED.
I don't see what the appeal of a stronger Switch is, unless it allowed it more multiplatform 3rd party support. And even if it did, it'd be stupid to split the user base like that.
Switch's entire gimmick is that it's a different offering than what Sony or Microsoft is providing. There's no reason to try and make it more of the same.
Horizon Zero Dawn and Death Stranding were merely prototypes for making the Ape Escape engine.
Still boggles my mind that ALBW was able to live up to the hype. Virtually any time a sequel is made a decade+ after the original installment, whether it be a movie, game, whatever, it fails hard.