26th April 2012, 8:03 PM
Sorry I should have conveyed a bit more.
The PSP version DOES have ALL the content added to the GBA version. It however has NONE of the DS version's because that was a full fledged re imagining of the game. Should they have ported that one over too? That would have been nice, yes, but as it stands the PSP version is at least superior to the GBA game. I will agree though that a lot of games tend to go back to square one every time they get remade... That is annoying.
The Lion King is pretty fun. I originally played it on "easy" mind you, so there's that. Aside from very amazing graphics, it also has amazing sound with music easily recognized straight from the movie. There's even some voices in there. It's about the only non-Capcom Disney tie-in game that's actually worth getting for the SNES.
Oh, and I added the comment I originally intended to add for Megaman Legends 64 in your N64 thread.
The PSP version DOES have ALL the content added to the GBA version. It however has NONE of the DS version's because that was a full fledged re imagining of the game. Should they have ported that one over too? That would have been nice, yes, but as it stands the PSP version is at least superior to the GBA game. I will agree though that a lot of games tend to go back to square one every time they get remade... That is annoying.
The Lion King is pretty fun. I originally played it on "easy" mind you, so there's that. Aside from very amazing graphics, it also has amazing sound with music easily recognized straight from the movie. There's even some voices in there. It's about the only non-Capcom Disney tie-in game that's actually worth getting for the SNES.
Oh, and I added the comment I originally intended to add for Megaman Legends 64 in your N64 thread.
"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)