Wunderbar
Arcane
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2015
- Messages
- 8,818
i've read that it's even worse.If/when they eventually release DP 2 for PC, I hope they also port DP Origins. Perhaps that's a better way to experience the first game.
i've read that it's even worse.If/when they eventually release DP 2 for PC, I hope they also port DP Origins. Perhaps that's a better way to experience the first game.
Technically a ps2 game
Aye, the Director's Cut is definitely inferior to the original. Terribly framey, lighting and textures are off, and the added scenes detract from the story. The only upside is that the bad combat is far easier, but to the point of triviality.
I can see that, there isn't much in common outside of the Pacific NW setting. I think I see more in common with Suda51 stuff.Swery claimed to have never seen Twin Peaks when he made the first one.
The reveal teaser for the first game even had midgets in a room with red curtains in the background ->I can see that, there isn't much in common outside of the Pacific NW setting. I think I see more in common with Suda51 stuff.Swery claimed to have never seen Twin Peaks when he made the first one.
"doesn't have that much in common with Twin Peaks."
nigga...please
superficially though. this is why I don't think swery is really bullshitting about not watching twin peaks, it's very likely other people in his team did. the visual design and certain setpieces are twin peaksy sure, but the actual writing has little or nothing in common with TP, which swery did on his own I believe.The point is that it's clearly heavily inspired by Twin Peaks.
superficially though. this is why I don't think swery is really bullshitting about not watching twin peaks, it's very likely other people in his team did. the visual design and certain setpieces are twin peaksy sure, but the actual writing has little or nothing in common with TP, which swery did on his own I believe.
broad tropes that aren't unique to TP, which was partly satirical of detective soaps themselvesThere is too much there, from the setting, to York as a unique idiosyncratic detective, to the darkness creeping under the surface of a small town.
Ok so this is a case of "I didn't like Twin Peaks therefore Deadly Premonition isn't a ripoff of it." I don't even care if something rips off another work so long as the end result can be appreciated in its own right (fact is that almost all creative works are taking ideas from somewhere else), but it starts to get annoying when people pretend something isn't a blatant copy."doesn't have that much in common with Twin Peaks."
nigga...please
Even the heroes are very different. York is just a little weird and amusing and is actually very appreciative and respectful of everyone he encounters in town. Cooper, on the other hand, is an obnoxious, sarcastic know it all and a huge prick.
about a small town where a murder takes place, the murder victim being the most beautiful girl in town known by everyone, the investigation into her death uncovers darker truths about the town and its people, gradually unveiling a sinister, supernatural undercurrent.
yes, superficial details you can glean from watching the Japanese Georgia coffee commercials or a casual reading of TP's wikipedia pagewhile copying other minor but extremely specific details like the main detective's absurd love of coffee and diner food.
But he wrote that the protagonist talks to some unknown person (Zach/Diane) and ends up changing his personality (Zach/Doppelganger Cooper). He even visits different dimensions (red room and white room and black lodge / white lodge).superficially though. this is why I don't think swery is really bullshitting about not watching twin peaks, it's very likely other people in his team did. the visual design and certain setpieces are twin peaksy sure, but the actual writing has little or nothing in common with TP, which swery did on his own I believe.The point is that it's clearly heavily inspired by Twin Peaks.