Many (NOT ALL) of the people who complain about them haven't actually played them.dave4shmups wrote:Yeah, I really don't understand all the complaints about the Sega Ages series

If you think PD would be cool, imagine a Hi-res, 60FPS Panzer Dragoon Saga.PepsimanVsJoe wrote: There was also a mention of a Panzer Dragoon remake. Hopefully Sega Ages doesn't screw that up(I'd kill zombie Jesus if they messed with the art). But hey if they can churn out a hi-res 60 FPS version of the game I would crap myself with the fury.
thats not true!1sethsez wrote:Many (NOT ALL) of the people who complain about them haven't actually played them.dave4shmups wrote:Yeah, I really don't understand all the complaints about the Sega Ages series
I was referring to the insert credit article:PaCrappa wrote:Yeah, but none of these are Saturn games.
I'm no huge Panzer Dragoon fan, I remember Last Bronx and Dynamite Deka as both kind of sucking. I've never even heard of Advanced Daisenryaku or Sega Memorial though...are these generally considered worth checking out?Thanks to some Japanese blogs we know that Famitsu's latest issue announces a forthcoming 'Gunstar Heroes Treasure Box (Gunstar Heroes, Alien Soldier, Dynamite Headdy)'. It supposedly will be part of 3D Ages' Sega Ages 2500 Series, since it's mentioned along with Panzer Dragoon, Last Bronx, Dynamite Deka [Die Hard Arcade], Advanced Daisenryaku and Sega Memorial, all for the PS2.
I'm a bit ambivalent here. While I was never too keen on these compilations (they usually don't provide much value), they do offer others the chance to experience some of these classics that were missed for whatever reasons. That said, you can't expect much innovation coming out of these releases. When you consider the alternatives, you can either make exact replicas or upgrade just the graphics and/or sound and music. Either way, gameplay stays or at least, should remain the same.jp wrote:Hopefully not... I'm really getting tired of this port happy BS.
It's interesting how complations can have as many as 80 games, sometimes with them ported over very well, and still have not much value...azmun wrote:I'm a bit ambivalent here. While I was never too keen on these compilations (they usually don't provide much value), they do offer others the chance to experience some of these classics that were missed for whatever reasons. That said, you can't expect much innovation coming out of these releases. When you consider the alternatives, you can either make exact replicas or upgrade just the graphics and/or sound and music. Either way, gameplay stays or at least, should remain the same.jp wrote:Hopefully not... I'm really getting tired of this port happy BS.
Now this is news.bloodflowers wrote:From the article Kron linked:
"Galaxy Force II: Appearing in perfect ported form. The project was actually started in order to give the game a perfect port for the first time!"
OMFG! I love that game!
Quite right. If I recall, Galaxy Force had a diifferent dedicated cab.Marc wrote:I think it was similar to the Afterburner thing, Afterburner 2 wasn't a follow-up as such, just a slight upgrade to the original. I think?
For me, it's not so much the number or quantity of games but rather how much (quality) time you spend on the cart or disc. IMHO, there are only a few handful of games with such substance that can hold one's interest in the long haul. After awhile, most games become stale.BrianC wrote:It's interesting how complations can have as many as 80 games, sometimes with them ported over very well, and still have not much value...
Exactly... if it did get ported to one of these re-release collection discs, it would most likely just be a straight port of the ST-V original.BulletMagnet wrote:In any case, even if RSG was ported someplace else, I doubt that it would include the expanded Saturn Mode found on the original port...that's not to say that the regular ol' arcade game by itself is anything to sniff at, but in any case I don't think that Saturn RSG owners have any reason to be up in arms no matter what happens.
Yeah, I'm more about quality, but I noticed that reviews often seem to focus on what isn't in the collection. The GCN Sonic Mega Collection has fine emulation and a good selection of games (though Sonic 3D blast and Spinball are debateable, I actually like those games), but it got 7.0s and ratings like that for leaving out Sonic CD and Sonic 3 and Knuckles (despite the fact that Sonic 3 and Knuckles is in the collection). Also, it seems like extras like developer commentary are almost more important to reviewers than the games in the collection. Stuff like that is cool, but I get collections to play the games.azmun wrote:For me, it's not so much the number or quantity of games but rather how much (quality) time you spend on the cart or disc. IMHO, there are only a few handful of games with such substance that can hold one's interest in the long haul. After awhile, most games become stale.BrianC wrote:It's interesting how complations can have as many as 80 games, sometimes with them ported over very well, and still have not much value...
It comes up becuase of the flawed way the media reviews collections. In Japan, games often come in one game collections instead of compliations. Yet, the classic NES series gets flak here for one game, even if it's a very good game, at 20 dollars. 20 dollars is not a bad price for a game and most of the classic NES series can be had for cheaper now. Here in the US, even quality multi game collections are rated low and a port of one older game on a modern system, even for cheap, is almost completely out of the question.PaCrappa wrote:I don't see how the notion that collections of remakes/ports have no value came up in a thread about Gunstar Heroes, Dynamite Headdy and Alien Soldier being on one disc. No value? WTF? Seriously.
Pa
I think you missed the point completely. For some gamers who already own or have experienced the following games, there is really no point in obtaining these collections/compilations. On the other hand, if you missed out (after all these years) playing them, these releases are well worth it and shouldn't be passed by again.PaCrappa wrote:I don't see how the notion that collections of remakes/ports have no value came up in a thread about Gunstar Heroes, Dynamite Headdy and Alien Soldier being on one disc. No value? WTF? Seriously.
Okay then. I doubt I'd have missed the point if you had said that in the first place. When you say it that way it means something. Previously it sounded as though you were griping just to see your words on a monitor. Which is something I'd do. Stop the madness man!azmun wrote:I think you missed the point completely. For some gamers who already own or have experienced the following games, there is really no point in obtaining these collections/compilations. On the other hand, if you missed out (after all these years) playing them, these releases are well worth it and shouldn't be passed by again.PaCrappa wrote:I don't see how the notion that collections of remakes/ports have no value came up in a thread about Gunstar Heroes, Dynamite Headdy and Alien Soldier being on one disc. No value? WTF? Seriously.
Who said there would be no originals included? From what I read in the news bytes, I get the impression that the games will be the originals. D3 is no longer involved with the SEGA Ages collections. SEGA is taking over. This will probably mean more originals and less horrid remakes like Golden Axe.Dylan1CC wrote:Yup, this is good news but who needs updated visuals for these gems? How hard could it be to at least also include the original versions of the games on the disc?
Gunstar Heroes doesn't need "improved" graphics. So...no originals included on the disc means I am still willing to punch my wallet in the gut and get Alien Soldier someday off ebay.
EDIT: Panzer Dragoon's dated jaggy 3D polygons (bless 'em) couldn't hurt from a bit of polish though.
Given that I've got a collection that would rival even yours, I'm not worried either... but the PS2 continues to cut into the Saturn exclsuives (with no end in sight) as well as provide a ton of its own exclusives (not to mention the Genesis and Dreamcast games that have jumped ship - Sonics, Street Fighter 3rd Strike, KOF2k+, now Treasure's Megadrive games, etc.). I heard the Dragon Force double pack is coming for the PS2 (if it's not out already). More will follow. Is it really all that unthinkable that Battle Garegga will appear on a retro pack for the PS3? Or Radiant Silvergun ported for the first time? I think it's only a matter of time. There will be a point when the PS3 not only has a ton of its own great games, but all the games for the PS2, PS1 and many of the better games from systems (Dreamcast, Saturn, Genesis and SMS) and arcade boards from years past...jp wrote:I'm not all that worried about them porting Saturn games...