General Parrish wrote:
Go ahead and spend your money on more songs for guitar hero . . . . . a game that simulates playing a quitar. I just don'te get it. What is so great about that in video game form? I love video games as much as anyone, but if your going to play a guitar game why not just learn to play the quitar? Youd actually learn a skill that's useful.
Vigilante 8 on the other hand is great in video game form. It let's me drive around shooting missles at other passing cars. Unlike playing the quitar this is impossible to do without going to prison.
This game is a very good game. It's the best arcade game out that I have played. I have played around 20 of them. Car combat has takin such a huge blow since the glory days of V8 and Twisted Metal I'm just happy to see a game on Xbox 360.
Microsoft is dropping the ball on this in my opinion. Sony owns the Twisted Metal brand now. If Microsoft was smart they would spend a lil money and invest in exclusive rights to V8 and invest in a 3rd full game. I do think car combat is the hiddin gem left in gaming. Today gaming is a huge market, but small developers still have a hard time making big bucks because almost all genres are dominated by a few big brands now. Car combat is the exeption of this rule and when someone releases the next good car combat game they are gonna make millions.
With SONY losing many long-time exclusive franchises, like Ace Combat, Final Fantasy, and lately, Tekken, it would not suprise me at all if we see a Twisted Metal game for all consoles. The main problem is convincing developers that the genre is still alive.
Last attempt at it was Full Auto, and it was solid, but a bit generic. Twisted Metal has the personality and cars that keep people playing.
I wouldn't mind original Twisted Metal 2 on Arcade. Or even TM3 or 4 (yes, "long-time" fans hate those 2, but they were great fun).
I actually enjoyed V8:2O more on PSX because of more vehicles, variety etc. Plus the all-terrain powerups kicked ***.
"Condemnation without investigation is the height of ignorance" - Albert Einstein