Twinfinite writes: The long and short of it is, Nintendo has the right to protect their property, and do they ever. Hell, it has taken them forever to even warm up to mobile device development because of a fear of diluting their product.
On the other hand lies, SEGA, Nintendo’s historical rival and now BFF. Both own some of the most iconic IPs in gaming history, but protect and promote them in quite different ways. Namely, SEGA has slowly softened and evolved their approach dramatically over the years.
Following a recent interview with Sony, Naughty Dog head Neil Druckmann claims the original intent was “unfortunately lost” in the process.
Glad he clarified it but i'm still somewhat skeptical. Plus, his comments about how Ai will revolutionize storytelling were still pretty iffy.
Druckmann claims the tech could 'push the boundaries of storytelling in games.'
I’m more interested in what else he said.
“Neil Druckmann says new Naughty Dog title could ‘redefine mainstream perceptions of gaming’
He also said it has "ethical issues we need to address" but of course that doesn't get the clicks.
I’m all for it. Cuts the time to make a game. Look, Hellblade 2 took 5 years to make, if AI can do that in half the time, as a consumer, I support it.
CD Projekt RED and Yigsoft have launched The Witcher 3 REDkit on PC. We interviewed both studios to discuss the release of these mod tools.
Freedom Planet is how I get my Sonic fix.
Yeah, Sega has never been selfish with Sonic. You could buy one of those small red Segas with the composite cables with Sonic and other Sega games preloaded on it at Target and Walmart. (Well, a few years ago)