We think of video game sequels as something that can outdo the original in most ways, be more of the same, or even hit fans with the heavy hammer of disappointment. That, however, ignores the rare but very real case of sequels that don’t necessarily suck but that will baffle fans with their nigh-inexplicable new design choices. We shouldn’t forget this class of sequel, it does at least a great job of providing fun to anyone learning about just how absolutely bizarre these games can get.
Remember how the Silent Hill series managed to make players feel scared and uneasy even when no enemy was on screen? Well, nobody had time for that when they were reinventing the square for the PlayStation Vita with Silent Hill: Book Of Memories.
This one isn’t a psychological horror game and barely even a survival horror game. It’s a weird attempt at making an isometric action title in the vein of the awesome Lara Croft and the Guardian of Light but in the world of Silent Hill.
Heck, you don’t even have one of the simplest staples of psychological horror that the series had done so well up until this point—like the feeling of loneliness and isolation—as this one is a co-op adventure featuring up to four players. Wild stuff.
Remember when the original The Legend Of Zelda changed gaming by taking a cue from the top-down perspective of RPGs and re-purposing it for action adventures? You don’t? Well, neither do I because I was too young to play it back then, but that’s what the legend of The Legend of Zelda says.
Zelda 2 is definitely not a bad game (if you’re looking for a bad Zelda side-scroller, google Zelda CD-I games), but it’s still pretty weird that Nintendo did away with the revolutionary design they’d come up with in the first one
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