Re: But who else is going to buy it? - Edit 2
Before modification by RugbyPlayingAshaman at 09/03/2010 05:07:52 PM
But the issue with the comparison is that readers of the book didn't go out and play "Dante's Inferno" (because I read the book and I didn't go out and rent or buy the game!), and most gamers consider it to be a less-successful knock-off of the style of gameplay popularized by the "God of War" series, so it basically exists as an entirely new IP which doesn't have the advantage of being able to access a readily tapped fan base nor the ability to be billed as an original game.
Would you, as a fan, buy a game that is just like any other game out there, but has none of the aspects of the series that made you like it in the first place? I'm not so sure other readers would buy a Wheel of Time game that is more similar to "The Legend of Zelda" game than the "Wheel of Time"s tory. What if the One Power was presented as a generic force that was not split into saidin or saidar?
And I say this while telling you that I liked the first video game and that it brought me back to the series, after I forgot about it while in college.
Would you, as a fan, buy a game that is just like any other game out there, but has none of the aspects of the series that made you like it in the first place? I'm not so sure other readers would buy a Wheel of Time game that is more similar to "The Legend of Zelda" game than the "Wheel of Time"s tory. What if the One Power was presented as a generic force that was not split into saidin or saidar?
And I say this while telling you that I liked the first video game and that it brought me back to the series, after I forgot about it while in college.