Less Remasters and Remakes, More Originality Please

Feb. 12, 2018



Less Remasters and Remakes, More Originality Please

Less Remasters and Remakes, More Originality Please

In this article, I will be looking at some of the best and worst cases of games being remastered. Is it ever enough to just give a game a shiny HD coat of paint and send it out for another beating? Or do developers need to bring something new to the table even when they’re effectively serving us a remaster of a decade old game for the thirteenth time?

“We are cannibalizing our audience by only giving them regurgitated material. Every movie is either a remake, a sequel, based on something else. Based on a former television series. Based on a successful videogame.” – Dean Devlin

You know the score. You’ve been following the news about the PlayStation 5/Xbox Thirteen/Nintendo Kookbox for over a year now. Finally, release day arrives! You stand in the queue waiting for your brand new console. As a part of your PlayStation 5/Xbox Thirteen/Nintendo Kookbox bundle, you get to choose one game to play! “Will you go withSkyrim4K Ultra HD Remastered Version? Will you go for Pac-Man Mega Deluxe Edition? Or, would Sir care to playResident EvilRe-Re-Remastered: Why Won’t You Let Us Rest In Peace Edition?”

“Be sure to come back in ten years time, then you’ll get to play theBloodwychUltra HD 8K Remastered Version…in VR!”

“Oh, great. I’ll make  note in my diary,” you mutter.

When it comes to remastered editions of games, my personal least favourite kind is a remaster of a fairly recent game…say, one generation old…which has been sent out there again with a marginal visual improvement, thanks to whatever the latest tiny technological advance may be. I’m looking at you,Prototype/Protoype 2Remaster. Graphically even when placed side by side with the original, you were barely any different! Frame rate issues also plagued this remaster and it was full price on release. Or how aboutGod of War 3 Remastered? If you’re going to release a remastered edition of a game that’s already perfectly fine in the original form, you could at least ensure that it’s not full of bugs. No? Too much to ask?

AndLegend of Zelda: The Windwaker HD. I see you there, lurking at the back. We already loved you in the original form. You were never aiming for realism with your cute and deformed art style. You were already classed as one of the most beautiful games of all time. Isn’t that enough for you?!

The other kind of remaster is the one which takes your preconceptions of the original games and tweaks them a little to make you question whether you really know what you think you know. You remember that bit inResident Evilwhen the dogs jump through the window? Well, in this version they don’t! You let yourself relax. But in the next room…the dogs jump down from the chandeliers instead! Ha! Got you, didn’t we?! That change alone has got to be worth the premium fee you paid for a game you already completed ten years ago.

Personally, I like this kind of remaster a little more but if the change is too big then it could potentially annoy some fans. With old classics, some people want them to be exactly as they remembered them being…only prettier, I guess.

Hey, want to pay double the price of a game that you can already buy on your PlayStation 3? What’s different? Well, the visuals are technically better but you’d need them to be running side-by-side and possibly to analyse them under a microscope to notice the difference. But hey – this time, all the DLC that you already purchased for the PS3 version has been included in the remake! We’re calling it the Ultimate Version, even though we’re going to release another version of the game when the next console is released. What will that one be called…erm, the Ultimatest version? The Ultimate Times Two Version?

Wait…what are you doing? You’re adding up how much the DLC you’d be interested in playing would cost to buy individually and comparing it to the price we’re asking you to play for the Ultimate Version? No! Naughty player! Maths is bad! Now, look into my eyes. You are getting sleepy…very sleepy. When I count to three, you will wake up and go and buy the Ultimate Edition of a game that you’ve already completed three times before. One…two…three!

Marginally better than the DLC included this time remaster, this one woos you with the promise of one whole new level to play! Possibly it was a brand new construct. Possibly it was a level that they’d already made but opted to delete from the original as it offered nothing noteworthy to the game’s story and messed with the pacing. Either way, it’s now yours! Enjoy it, you lucky people.

Do you remember Human Killing Machine which was released in 1989 for the Spectrum? Oh, youdon’t?  In that case, can I interest you in Human Killing Machine: Redux? It’s the game that literally nobody was crying out for! It’s a remake that has next to nothing in common with the original! However, we bought the license on the cheap and thought it’d save us having to hire a writer to come up with an original concept for a game. Do you know how expensive original thoughts are?!

Despite this rant about remasters/remakes/ultimate editions, I’m as guilty as the next person when it comes to buying them. Sometimes I wish I wasn’t but yes, I do it too occasionally. I bought the VR version ofSkyrimjust because I was that desperate for a decent RPG for myPlayStation VR.

Sometimes, I’ll even come across a remaster that improves on the original enough for me to be pleased I bought it. For example, I liked the Redux versions of theMetrogames. Being given the option to play through each of those games with the play style of the other one was a nice touch. And yet…could the Last Light portion of that Redux have been done as an update rather than a remaster? Or would those hours spent crawling through the Metro once more have been better spent discovering another more original game to play instead? Hmm…

I am also aware that for people who never played the originals…and maybe haven’t owned the original consoles either…they arguably serve a purpose.

I hope that you’ve enjoyed reading this article. If not, don’t worry – the 4K Ultra HD Remastered version of it that I’ll post next year will be much better. So, where do you stand when it comes to remasters? Do you buy them or have you managed to resist the urge so far? What’s the best and the worst remaster that you have played? Is there a game that you want to be remastered? Please comment below and let us know.

You could read theDemon’s Souls Remaster Possible Teaserarticle next. Alternatively, you could try theStar Ocean: The Last Hope 4k Remaster Revealedarticle.

Caradox

I love gaming, creative writing, the theatre, anime, watching football & spending time with friends & family. I’m also a bit obsessed with superheroes.

I am very much in favor of re-releases of old games. even if they are lazy remakes simply made for the easy cash they make with those releases. why you ask?

well…

It becomes more and more apperant that videogame developers/publishers need more cash to develop their games and with videogame prices still staying in the 50-70 euro range they are getting more creative in making gamers pay more.

Recent development with microtransactions in AAA- games (Destiny 2, Starwars battlefront for example) are not something i am fond of, since i like a game to be a complete package from the start. also not a big fan of first-month DLC (that shows they intentionally withheld content to make some extra bucks).

I approve of DLC, but it has to be purely optional and only compliment the base game… not replace it, unless its clearly communicated to the player that that is the model they are going for (like most mmorpg’s).

Remasters are sometimes a quick cash-grab, but at least it pleases a part of the gamers, and it is an honest way of making money.If you dont like, you dont buy, and if you do like, you do buy.

I myself cannot wait for Dark Souls and Secret of mana. Im also sure that i will enjoy the Shadow of the collosus again this year

I dont mind paying for it, and can only hope they invest that money in a new game. This way of making some extra cash from me is much better than trrying to tempt me into buying potentially worthless lootboxes or trick me into buying a half-finished game pretty much forcing me to buy DLC a month later to complete it (without telling me upfront).

I do wonder Cas how many of those 4K TV owning people actually have the right size TV, the right sized room and are sitting the correct distance away from the screen to even get the benefit of it being 4K. If not, they’ll only be getting the equivalent of a HD image anyway.

I’ve not jumped aboard with 4K myself yet but perhaps when my HD TV breaks I’ll consider it – so long as I have a large enough living room by then to make it viable.

I’m with you regarding new ideas, Lich180. And I think the rise of Kickstarter has been great for giving more original – and riskier sounding – RPGs a chance at being played.

I think part of the problem is how expensive AAA games have become to produce and how damaging one flopping badly can be for games companies. Publishers are increasingly looking for safe bets, so it’s sequel this and remake that. I’m just glad that we do have a thriving indie game scene and avenues such as Kickstarter to balance those out with more quirky, original titles too.

Why bother with new ideas, when the old ones can be redone and made better or put on new media/consoles?

That’s just common sense! More money for less work!

Hm. Maybe I should look into marketing.

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Anyways, I would love to see new ideas come out. A lot of really awesome games came out last year, and many of them were new IP’s and won a ton of awards. Developers and publishers shouldn’t be so scared of a new thing that they refurbish an older game over and over (looking at you, Bethesda).

Let’s see some wild and crazy stuff, like indie devs are so fond of doing.

I noticed movies are going this route now as well. After Blue Ray now there is Ultimate 4k Edition for another 30 USD. Getting to be really pathetic…

Cas