12th February 2010, 4:06 PM
http://www.joystiq.com/2010/02/12/x10-a-...ark-media/
Here's a video. About the only thing I don't like is, for all the improvements they made visually, everyone still talks like a Power Ranger via head bobbing and no lip movement. Even if they didn't want to actually model the head for opening a mouth, they could easily put in animated textures on the face for talking. I've seen older games that do that and it looks fine for what it does.
All said, I'm still getting it. Unlike the two Banjo ports, they KEPT the fun logo transformation. Kinda sad that the big "N" walking around in the two Banjo games was simply cut out entirely when they could easily fit in either another logo or even something from in the game to fill that role.
8 player max instead of 4? Great! Of course 16 players would be better :D. Counter-op and co-op also playable online! Also, apparently they are planning on some extra levels and other content down the line.
Here's a video. About the only thing I don't like is, for all the improvements they made visually, everyone still talks like a Power Ranger via head bobbing and no lip movement. Even if they didn't want to actually model the head for opening a mouth, they could easily put in animated textures on the face for talking. I've seen older games that do that and it looks fine for what it does.
All said, I'm still getting it. Unlike the two Banjo ports, they KEPT the fun logo transformation. Kinda sad that the big "N" walking around in the two Banjo games was simply cut out entirely when they could easily fit in either another logo or even something from in the game to fill that role.
8 player max instead of 4? Great! Of course 16 players would be better :D. Counter-op and co-op also playable online! Also, apparently they are planning on some extra levels and other content down the line.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)