From Clones to Genre: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(clean up)
m (categories and general cleanup)
Line 22: Line 22:
[[Category:Follow the Leader]]
[[Category:Follow the Leader]]
[[Category:Genres]]
[[Category:Genres]]
[[Category:From Clones To Genre]]
[[Category:From Clones to Genre]]

Revision as of 08:44, 4 April 2014

"I'm hesitant to use the term Grand Theft Auto clone anymore, because open world games are becoming so ubiquitous that the term feels hopelessly quaint, like how we used to call First Person Shooters Doom clones."

While genres can be known for a variety of works, they don't always start out that way. Usually they start out as loads of obvious Follow the Leader copies of a Genre Busting or making work, or a Genre Popularizer for a genre so small that this is the first time the mainstream has heard of it. Eventually all the followers stop being that, and start having loads of works that stand on their own. This is the point that you don't just have a bunch of clones, you have a full genre.

This doesn't always happen, though. Kart-racing Video Games have yet to go past just being Mario Kart clones in spite of both Mario Kart and the clones having been around since The Nineties. On the other hand, this can happen almost immediately. Tetris was such a simple game, any clone needed to set itself apart to avoid getting sued.

The opposite is Genre Killer.

Examples (State the genre, popularizer, and then the turning point to full genre):