14th March 2005, 5:26 PM
For the first three, a touch screen thing would be great for obviuos reasons. MI4 and GF used a controller anyway so honestly the DS doesn't offer much except, as OB1 suggested, an inventory screen that's always there.
Too bad Lucasarts just doesn't care...
Ya know, in the post-Lord of the Rings movie era we now live in, I really think SCi should port over Kingdom O' Magic. Honestly, even after playing two Monkey Island games, I still think it's the funniest game I've ever played. I think the game could really do without the fighting element... or at least totally redo that... and some of the puzzles really aren't that special, so as a pure adventure game it's not the best I've played by far, but the comedy is completely solid and was more than enough for me to play it repeatedly. If they actually remade the game with some of the puzzles redone and a solid replacement for the fighting system, then they would have a game that would sell by ridiculous margins I'd think... well to people that like puzzle adventure games.
Too bad Lucasarts just doesn't care...
Ya know, in the post-Lord of the Rings movie era we now live in, I really think SCi should port over Kingdom O' Magic. Honestly, even after playing two Monkey Island games, I still think it's the funniest game I've ever played. I think the game could really do without the fighting element... or at least totally redo that... and some of the puzzles really aren't that special, so as a pure adventure game it's not the best I've played by far, but the comedy is completely solid and was more than enough for me to play it repeatedly. If they actually remade the game with some of the puzzles redone and a solid replacement for the fighting system, then they would have a game that would sell by ridiculous margins I'd think... well to people that like puzzle adventure games.
"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)