[quote name='ooga']Yes beat'em ups do have a place in gaming. HOWEVER, the examples you gave are not games that have been saddled with the legacy of an old franchise. To make a game that is part of an old franchise you have to conform to certain guidelines and live up to certain expectations. These are things you don't have to worry about when creating a brand new property.[/QUOTE]
My point is that those are, first and foremost,
solid titles. If you can build a game like that and then work on all features that made the old one stand out from the bunch (peculiar moves, distinctive characters and enemies, original music covers, familiar stages, etc.), then you're practically set.
Obviously, I'm over simplifying things, but the fact is that this DDN doesn't seem a good game even on its own, at least from what I've seen until now: animations and collisions have nothing to do with being more or less faithful with the franchise. Slapping a beloved name on a lackluster title will only aggravate things...
[quote name='ooga']It will never live up to the expectations of die hard fans who still remember DD as a great franchise. It will also not add much to the experience of new comers who have no idea who the Lee boys are.[/QUOTE]
Someone will always whine over something even with the most lovely-crafted remake, but crafting a good game can greatly help reduce the numbers of those people. Haters gonna hate anyway
Plus, you can please old fans and newcomers altogether by offering some sort of history lesson about the game with screenshots, trivia, pamphlets and (*gasp!*) even an emulated version of the original. I think that would work with any remake, but I'm also pretty optimistic
Changing subject, I'm happy to confirm that the new update for the Sales & Specials+ app did fix that bug in both ways, as now my Ms. Splosion Man shows as purchased even on regular Marketplace and, after deletion, I have been able to re-download it without extra charges... phew!
