So it's gone from 4-player simultaneous in the last unofficial entry to single player with seemingly four times less action? Given how little coverage Moon Diver received compared to this, it just goes to show how much name recognition is everything nowadays.
Quote from: Black Tiger on July 19, 2013, 07:58:09 AMSo it's gone from 4-player simultaneous in the last unofficial entry to single player with seemingly four times less action? Given how little coverage Moon Diver received compared to this, it just goes to show how much name recognition is everything nowadays....yes. You know it's no accident that "Symphony of the Night" and similar stuff is referenced repeatedly...
Quote from: esteban on July 20, 2013, 12:28:36 AMQuote from: Black Tiger on July 19, 2013, 07:58:09 AMSo it's gone from 4-player simultaneous in the last unofficial entry to single player with seemingly four times less action? Given how little coverage Moon Diver received compared to this, it just goes to show how much name recognition is everything nowadays....yes. You know it's no accident that "Symphony of the Night" and similar stuff is referenced repeatedly...Wow, really? The masses of retroactively-"retro gamers" are always chanting "Metroidvanias" or "Castletroids" and explaining when no one asks how SotN was either the first of its kind or the second, after Super Metroid. But as bad as it is that they are completely oblivious to the dozens of those games on 8-bit consoles, you'd think that Capcom (or whoever is tossing around "SotN") would trust that the kind of people they're reaching out to with terms like that would have gone straight to wikipedia the moment this game was announced, to figure out what "Strider" is... and discovered that SotN is a "Strider" game, as the first version was a Dragon'sTramboattheclashofthebattleofolympysIII style game. That'd be like an update to Mario Bros being maketed as a "Bubble Bobble" style game.