Crazy talking, the reasoning here it’s appalling to say the least. You’re a freelance illustrator? I look forward hearing back from you and how it’s all well if an illustration you’ve made gets picked up by another artist, straight up rotoscoped and then embellished with bells and whistles effects, new coloring, and you don’t get any credit for the original art, just the guy who made the “improvements” gets full credit, where the new illustration would literally not exist without your work. A painter signs his art, as does a sculptor, a cinematographer, make up artist, game play designer, an art director, or what have you, their signatures are in the credits. I mean, evidently for you videogames are not art, for me they are. Sun 12th Feb don’t tell me you know nothing about games industry practices, NDAs and how curricula work, because you already did.Ĭan’t believe you seriously spelled that out and decided to post it anyway, honestly, a tad embarrassing imo.This situation isn't exactly an isolated one, either - with other original development teams also being excluded from the game credits of remasters and remakes nowadays.Ī similar story about Pac-Man World Re-PAC surfaced last year and Bandai Namco patched in the original staff credits. Kirsch originally worked on Metroid Prime and Metroid Prime 2: Echoes for GameCube as a senior gameplay engineer. in some cases we put them before the remaster team. In remasters I've worked on we've credited the original game. I worked with so many amazing people on the game and everyone's name should be included in the remaster, not just a single card like this." Yeah im not a fan of this practice. Zoid Kirsch ( "While many studios did amazing work on the remaster, I'm let down Metroid Prime's Remaster does not include the full original game credits. Instead, it's a single screen, simply noting how the remaster is "based on the work of Metroid Prime development staff": Former Retro studios engineer Zoid Kirsch, who recently mentioned how he wasn't very impressed with the quality of the doors in the remaster, has now voiced his frustration about the game's credits - noting how it does not include the full original credits. While most people are satisfied, it seems not everyone out there is happy. Original article : Nintendo surprised pretty much everyone earlier this week when it shadow-dropped Metroid Prime Remastered after years of ongoing rumours. Not just for my credit (even though most of my code was probably replaced), but for people whose code and work are largely unchanged, like Mark HH, Steve McCrea, all of the uprezzed art and concepts, the game design. “When my son plays Metroid Prime on the Switch for the first time, the fact that he won't see and my colleagues' names in the credits as the original creators is a punch in the gut." This is a travesty. Here's what he had to say about the remaster not crediting the original developers in a message to Axios: Nintendo later released a Metroid Prime Trilogy collection for Wii, updating the first two games with widescreen support, enhanced visuals, and motion control support.Update : The original Metroid Prime technical lead engineer Jack Mathews has now shared his own thoughts, calling it a "travesty". Metroid Prime 3: Corruption followed those two games on Wii in 2007. Metroid Prime and Metroid Prime 2: Echoes were originally released on GameCube in 20, respectively. Nintendo did not announce similar plans for the two Metroid Prime sequels, despite hopes for a Metroid Prime trilogy re-release on Switch. In addition, the remaster will also offer a control setting that mimics the feel of the original game, as well as other control scheme options. On top of the improved graphics, Metroid Prime Remastered will implement a dual-stick control scheme, an important update to the first entry in the classic series. During a Nintendo Direct livestream, the publisher announced that the remaster of the original game in the first-person reinvention of the Metroid series would be available on the eShop “later today.” Metroid Prime Remastered is now available for $39.99 in the Nintendo Switch eShop. The original Metroid Prime is coming to Nintendo Switch - and it’s a remaster.
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