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By far the greatest chance for this genre was brought up with The Walking Dead
It could be promoted that for every single tv series out there, there could be a good cinematic game experience.
It doesn’t even have to stay on tv, it could be also for movies or other media.
For the record, I don’t find the Walking Deads the best games ever, I could at most say they deserve an 8/10 (still good) but it’s mostly the concept I like.
The exceptional and original thing about the Walking Deads is that they were given their own series, their own characters and their own unique stories.
I’ve seen this image do the rounds in other gaming websites - it’s reductive mockery but it brings up questions about the Walking Dead’s success:
I don’t consider Walking Dead all that innovative when comes to adventure games - it’s technologically unimpressive, it apes David Cage’s design and it’s not even the first Telltale game to go this more casualised route.
It is however pretty unprecedented when it comes to zombie games. Zombies have been done to death in video games with Resident Evil 4 being almost eight years old and no one has really done anything interesting with them mechanically.
Along comes The Walking Dead and it seems like a breathe of fresh air for the zombie genre providing the kind of mood and feelings those gamers have wanted ever since they were left unsatisfied by Dead Island following its emotional trailer:
It will be interesting to see what Telltale does with Fables - but I doubt they’ll ever see a repeat of what happened with The Walking Dead. These sort of things happen when all the elements line up just right with gamers and developers alike.
LOL I’ve never seen that before.
lol, me neither. It made me giggle Especially the people’s reactions part
Duckman: Can you believe it? Five hundred bucks for a parking ticket?
Cornfed Pig: You parked in a handicapped zone.
Duckman: Who cares? Nobody parks there anyway, except for the people who are supposed to park there and, hell, I can outrun them anytime.
The best part was ‘100% Linear & Scripted’ and ‘yours choices barely matter at all’. Silly idiots. haha
Stuart Bradley Newsom - Naughty Shinobi || Our Game: Shadow Over Isolation
OK OK, I admit it was easier than I would like. It was my main pet peeve actually but I didn’t critique it as a game of difficulty only but also as an experience. As an entertainment in general it was good.
Also, it has the potential to become difficult. e.g. it had some glimpses of complex puzzles when they had to go around their vehicles in the 1st or 2nd episode in the abandoned gas station. Another show could take that and make it more complex.
And at the end of the day I enjoyed it. And I enjoyed it much better than mediocre hard adventure games that are only hard with zero atmosphere.
And I never liked the dead environment of Myst-like adventures (probably irrelevant, but heh.).
In other news Telltale announced today the the Walking Dead has sold over 8.5 million episodes.
Yes, that is 8.5 MILLION episodes.
Earning Telltale a nice little $40 million.
An adventure game is nothing more than a good story set with engaging puzzles that fit seamlessly in with the story and the characters, and looks and sounds beautiful.
Roberta Williams
I really wish they would stop with that extremely disingenuous way of presenting the numbers and just say that they sold 1.7 million copies of the season.
(Which is a pretty good number for an adventure game. Good for them.)
Lucien21 do you know how much development and marketing costs?
“Going on means going far - Going far means returning”
It would certainly average out to 1.7 m, but that assumes that everyone who bought one episode, went on to buy all the episodes.
An adventure game is nothing more than a good story set with engaging puzzles that fit seamlessly in with the story and the characters, and looks and sounds beautiful.
Roberta Williams
Lucien21 do you know how much development and marketing costs?
Nope not a clue.
The only thing they said was that the game was 40% more expensive than their previous titles, but that it wasn’t a huge budget.
An adventure game is nothing more than a good story set with engaging puzzles that fit seamlessly in with the story and the characters, and looks and sounds beautiful.
Roberta Williams
Earning Telltale a nice little $40 million.
They said it would be $40 million without discounts, but a large part of the sales were through the Steam sale at $12.50 for the whole season. I’d imagine they made about $25 million on it.
They said it would be $40 million without discounts, but a large part of the sales were through the Steam sale at $12.50 for the whole season. I’d imagine they made about $25 million on it.
No need to guess. If the folks at the WSJ had bothered reading their own interview before guesstimating the $40 million figure, they’d have noticed that Dan Connors mentioned that they made $16 per user on average. So if we count approximately 1.7 million users, that’s $27 million in revenue on TWD. Which is still a nice number, and much deserved.
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