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Seems to me most new games are just sequels... more of the same. And even if a game is not a sequel but a new development, it still is more of the same. I dunno... the videogame industry is kinda going the way the music industry has gone long ago: mass-produce and hype the same old stuff with ever-better and improving technologies...higher resolution? faster frame rates? surround audio, broadband online gaming? And what, the newest ATI Radeon is now capable of generating true shadows? Big whoop.
I'm not saying I'm above all that...I buy into the promise of ever-better graphics etc. just like anyone else... but even with the better-looking Ikaruga out I still love Radiant Silvergun (to use an example). In a way even Ikaruga is more of the same....OK, not as much since it introduces the black/white system etc. and doesn't use the same storyline. But generally, for most other games, this is true.
I'm talking about yet another Tony Hawk, yet another NFL, yet another Doom or Unreal, yet another you-name-it. Funny how games now come out with years instead of version numbers, much like Windows, Office, Norton etc. ....
Maybe I just have my fill of all my favorite genres of games with the collection I've built for my Saturn and Dreamcast. Maybe I just don't need anything for a while. Not until gaming technology has progressed so far that getting new games really will amount to a whole new experience for me. Even then, some actual innovation will be welcome, too, as Sega has repeatedly demonstrated. |