Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
Re: Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
But if a band recorded an album of cover songs, they'd only credit the songwriter and possibly original band. You wouldn't see album notes crediting the previous sound engineer, recording studio, trumpet player. Is this any different? Maybe, I don't know. Seems like an odd idea for an article, and I'm not sure 95% of gamers would be particularly bothered about it.
- ratsoalbion
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Re: Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
Haven’t read the piece yet but quite a few remasters and rereleases do have the original team in the credits, as well as the remaster studio.
Re: Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
It’s an interesting one. Where you’re rebuilding the game from the ground up and redoing the assets and code then maybe you’d just credit the designers. But if you’re just building a layer that runs the original code underneath then I’d expect to see the original team fully credited.
The IGDA credit guidelines don’t really stretch to emulation, remasters and remakes. Maybe they’re due a bit of a tidy.
The IGDA credit guidelines don’t really stretch to emulation, remasters and remakes. Maybe they’re due a bit of a tidy.
Re: Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
From a moral point of view, if the original credits are available, they should be included. Or, indeed, published online somewhere official.
You're re-presenting someone's original work. It never stopped being their work; I can't imagine that they opted-out of receiving credit every time their work is made available.
You're re-presenting someone's original work. It never stopped being their work; I can't imagine that they opted-out of receiving credit every time their work is made available.
Re: Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
I really like remasters and with current gen (PS4/XB1) releases being as dull and uninteresting cash grabs as they are, remasters of very good, classic games is what I care about most.
I recently spent 90+ hours with one of my favourite racing games of all time Burnout Paradise Remastered. Absolutely amazing but...
....If there's one thing I dislike it's the lack of anything new or of interest to gamers coming back for more. Scrapped content, unreleased artwork, interviews with developers for example, should be standard. Keep the game the same, improve what you want, just give us extra content!
Rare Replay is what I'm talking about. That's how remasters should look. Just my opinion.
I recently spent 90+ hours with one of my favourite racing games of all time Burnout Paradise Remastered. Absolutely amazing but...
....If there's one thing I dislike it's the lack of anything new or of interest to gamers coming back for more. Scrapped content, unreleased artwork, interviews with developers for example, should be standard. Keep the game the same, improve what you want, just give us extra content!
Rare Replay is what I'm talking about. That's how remasters should look. Just my opinion.
- ThirdDrawing
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Re: Remasters — the good, the bad, and the fugly
I'm okay with them when they do something along the lines of the first Persona game re-released on PSP.
They re-did the graphics. fixed the mistakes they made with characters (they changed the ethnicity of one of the characters to make it more "American" originally), re-translated the entire game and added a quest that had originally been cut.
It was a massive amount of effort and I was happy to support it.
On the flip side, the new Onimusha re-master is not having quite as much work done, but they are touching things up.
https://blog.us.playstation.com/2018/08 ... y-15-2019/
And they're also releasing it at an insanely low price, so it doesn't feel like Capcom is trying to take advantage of consumers.
They re-did the graphics. fixed the mistakes they made with characters (they changed the ethnicity of one of the characters to make it more "American" originally), re-translated the entire game and added a quest that had originally been cut.
It was a massive amount of effort and I was happy to support it.
On the flip side, the new Onimusha re-master is not having quite as much work done, but they are touching things up.
https://blog.us.playstation.com/2018/08 ... y-15-2019/
And they're also releasing it at an insanely low price, so it doesn't feel like Capcom is trying to take advantage of consumers.