No Problem With Licensed Games (Sugar Wiki): Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
No edit summary
Line 174:
** ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' also got one good game in ''The Fallen''.
* The recent [[Lego Adaptation Game]]s -- ''Lego [[Star Wars]]'', ''[[Lego Indiana Jones]]'', and ''Lego [[Batman]]''—despite being ''double''-licenses, are quite fun and are well received by critics. This is in part because [[Affectionate Parody|they don't take their universes seriously]] ''at all''. In fact, the games probably wouldn't ''work'' if they happened in an original universe. If you could attribute a problem to them, it would only be that [[Capcom Sequel Stagnation]] is beginning to set in; nothing connected to this trope at all.
** There are also [[LEGO]] games made before these, which are also well-liked by the people who played them. Among the most well-known are ''[[LEGO Racers]]'', ''[[Lego Island]]'', and ''[[Rock Raiders]]''. There is a side effect to the people who loved these, however; if you loved them, chances are you hate the licensed ones mentioned above, as many complain they are [[ItsIt's the Same, SoNow It Sucks|too similar]] to each other, so they [[And the Fandom Rejoiced|get excited]] whenever a non-licensed one is announced.
* ''[[Strider Hiryu|Strider]]''. Yes, ''[[Strider Hiryu|Strider]]'', the Capcom-made side-scroller with the futuristic ninja, is very loosely based on a [[Manga]] which Capcom co-produced with the intention of adapting it into a game. Don't feel bad if you didn't know...[[Adaptation Displacement|you're not alone on that]].
** The character Strider Hiryu is actually jointly owned by Capcom and the Moto Kikaku manga studio, which is why he has no problems appearing in the company's [[Capcom vs. Whatever|crossover titles]].