They’re just weird in general, I remember when they invited Achievement Hunter to show off some new game content for GTA V and they got upset by the swearing
Id say that’s a bad choice of how to frame the newer game released is “just a coat of paint” issue. Id say you’re raking the colors too literally. I wouldn’t call special edition releases or director’s cuts the same as just slapping a coat of paint on something. Especially when we’re talking about a gaming world before DLC. The only way to upgrade a game or add new functionality was to release a new version of some kind. Would you consider a Game of the Year edition with all the DLC bundled a coat of paint? Or a Deluxe version that has unique skins?
Pokemon Red/Green specifically released as a paired game to take advantage of the Gameboy Link Cable, with the pokemon trading praised at the time as a great new concept. The split was intentional and promoted playing and trading with friends. The games played exactly the same, you just could only catch half the pokemon without trading with friends.
Blue in Japan was a special edition released with better graphics and extended dialogue. It was used as the base for the Red/Blue games released internationally.
Yellow was a special edition that tied into the Anime series, having Pikachu be the starter and refuse to stay in the pokeball so he followed you around, like Ash in the Anime, and the rival using an Eevee instead of the initial 3 starters like the previous versions. Otherwise it was nearly identical to Red/Blue, and should be treated as just a different version of the same game.
The next games released in the series then changed the region and pokemon entirely, creating the multiple generations Pokemon is known for.
Steamforged Games surprise cancelled further production of the tabletop game Guild Ball in a statement they have since deleted from their website that said they made the perfect game, but the game was being played wrong by the players, whose fault it was that gameplay and the meta was becoming risk-averse and stagnant.
Is there any other game company that hates their fans as much as Nintendo?
Rockstar
They’re just weird in general, I remember when they invited Achievement Hunter to show off some new game content for GTA V and they got upset by the swearing
You can’t swear in GTA that’s illegal
And Bethesda. And Ubisoft.
Ubisoft? They just show it a different way. By releasing the same games with a new coat of paint at a premium.
Nintendo LITERALLY invented that concept with Super Mario AllStars on the SNES.
You think Nintendo invented Remakes and Remasters with Super Mario All-Stars? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_game_remake#History
ubisoft even tried to use propaganda through mythic quest show to “reinvent themselves”
What is Pokemon?
Eh, Pokemon I think adds more per game generation than games like Assassin’s Creed nowadays.
Red, Green, Blue, Yellow didn’t need to be 4 different games or because that’s unfair, it didn’t need to be 3 different games.
Id say that’s a bad choice of how to frame the newer game released is “just a coat of paint” issue. Id say you’re raking the colors too literally. I wouldn’t call special edition releases or director’s cuts the same as just slapping a coat of paint on something. Especially when we’re talking about a gaming world before DLC. The only way to upgrade a game or add new functionality was to release a new version of some kind. Would you consider a Game of the Year edition with all the DLC bundled a coat of paint? Or a Deluxe version that has unique skins?
Pokemon Red/Green specifically released as a paired game to take advantage of the Gameboy Link Cable, with the pokemon trading praised at the time as a great new concept. The split was intentional and promoted playing and trading with friends. The games played exactly the same, you just could only catch half the pokemon without trading with friends.
Blue in Japan was a special edition released with better graphics and extended dialogue. It was used as the base for the Red/Blue games released internationally.
Yellow was a special edition that tied into the Anime series, having Pikachu be the starter and refuse to stay in the pokeball so he followed you around, like Ash in the Anime, and the rival using an Eevee instead of the initial 3 starters like the previous versions. Otherwise it was nearly identical to Red/Blue, and should be treated as just a different version of the same game.
The next games released in the series then changed the region and pokemon entirely, creating the multiple generations Pokemon is known for.
Steamforged Games surprise cancelled further production of the tabletop game Guild Ball in a statement they have since deleted from their website that said they made the perfect game, but the game was being played wrong by the players, whose fault it was that gameplay and the meta was becoming risk-averse and stagnant.
Nope.