Same here! Mirror's Edge has a lot of potential, and I've heard that 2 is in development!War Penguin said:Mirror's Edge.
First game had allot of potential but was too short. I would love to see another.
Same here! Mirror's Edge has a lot of potential, and I've heard that 2 is in development!War Penguin said:Mirror's Edge.
First game had allot of potential but was too short. I would love to see another.
That holds true in the film world, where sequels are more often forced due to a studio mandate rather than a natural progression of a story's events. It's not necessarily true in the gaming world, where technology and R&D factor into things as much as plot development. Sequels enable companies to refine their tech and their ideas, iron out kinks that cropped up in the original game, and add new content and features that couldn't be put in the first as a result of development constraints. A Force Unleashed sequel might, for instance, iron out all the terrible enemy design problems from the first game.DaBozz said:Considering most sequels are worse than the ogrinal be careful what you wish for.
So imma say duke nukem totaly needs a sequel /sarcasm
This, a million times this.Pandajerk63 said:conkers bad fur day.
I agree. You think a petition would work if enough people were to sign it?Pifflestick said:Dungeon Keeper 2 deserves a sequel. It was going to get one too, but EA stepped in and bought Bullfrog (the makers of DK2) forever destroying any chance that there will be a sequel.
I dunno if that's a rhetorical question, but it's because Oddworld Inhabitants decided to do movies instead. They were working on something called Citizen Seige for a while but now nobody's sure just what they're doing. Could be making films, could be making another Oddworld game, nobody seems to know for sure.fearofthemind said:Why is their no sequel to Oddworld: Stranger's Wrath ;(
most of those games you listed have overstayed there welcome in later sequels.NickCaligo42 said:Examples of games that are superior to their originals:
Assassin's Creed 2
Super Mario Bros. 3
Sonic 3 and Knuckles
Devil May Cry 3
Ratchet and Clank: Up Your Arsenal
God of War II
Uncharted 2
Phantasy Star II and IV
Resident Evil 4
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
Super Castlevania IV
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
Star Wars: Battlefront II (yes, even though it's tripe it's still miles better than the first)
Black and White 2
Agree with you a lot.NickCaligo42 said:That holds true in the film world, where sequels are more often forced due to a studio mandate rather than a natural progression of a story's events. It's not necessarily true in the gaming world, where technology and R&D factor into things as much as plot development. Sequels enable companies to refine their tech and their ideas, iron out kinks that cropped up in the original game, and add new content and features that couldn't be put in the first as a result of development constraints. A Force Unleashed sequel might, for instance, iron out all the terrible enemy design problems from the first game.DaBozz said:Considering most sequels are worse than the ogrinal be careful what you wish for.
So imma say duke nukem totaly needs a sequel /sarcasm
Examples of games that are superior to their originals:
Assassin's Creed 2
Super Mario Bros. 3
Sonic 3 and Knuckles
Devil May Cry 3
Ratchet and Clank: Up Your Arsenal
God of War II
Uncharted 2
Phantasy Star II and IV
Resident Evil 4
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
Super Castlevania IV
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
Star Wars: Battlefront II (yes, even though it's tripe it's still miles better than the first)
Black and White 2
...Aaaand the list just goes on. For the most part sequels in gaming are nothing but good for the developers and for players. A series can overstay its welcome, of course, and that point comes at precisely the moment when the developers run out of ideas on how to continue refining, mixing up, or finding new twists on gameplay. Games I'd list in this group would include Half-Life 2's three-episode trilogy (HL2 was so perfect they'd basically already used their best ideas) and extremely long-running series like Mega Man X. The principle of development through sequels can also work in reverse, where a sequel tries something new and fails at it or where a new feature ends up detracting from old favorites or game balance, as with Devil May Cry 2 and Resident Evil 5. All in all it's pretty much the same crapshoot you get out of a new game, but it sounds more appealing and safe to publishers and fans.
This, and also Dark Messiah. That game was so fudging awesome! I can't believe they didn't make a sequel. I am disapoint.War Penguin said:Mirror's Edge.
First game had allot of potential but was too short. I would love to see another.
I take back everything. This!sumanoskae said:I want Oblivion to knock up Dark Messiah and for the child to be raised by Mass Effect