10th September 2003, 12:20 PM
Could care less? That means you don't care the minimal amount, so how is that an insult? That's like saying "you aren't as ugly as some people!" to someone! Not exactly very insulting, only slightly so.
They could just only remake Zelda 1 and 2 anyway even if they did include the rest of the 2D games. Why would they be forced to up the graphics of the rest? LTTP doesn't really even need that big an update by that weird Japanese "if it's 16 bit or higher, it's fine" standard. Not only that, Zelda 1's graphics have already been remade in Japan. They just need to take the graphics of that remake (which I hear sucks because they did massive alterations to the game, shrinking down the map by about half) and apply it to the original. I imagine at least OOT would look like the OOT remake in that bonus disk, since well it would be a lot easier to just reuse the port they already made of the game then to report it with less graphical enhancements.
So then, I sure hope Game Informer (which is notoriously WRONG) is correct.
They could just only remake Zelda 1 and 2 anyway even if they did include the rest of the 2D games. Why would they be forced to up the graphics of the rest? LTTP doesn't really even need that big an update by that weird Japanese "if it's 16 bit or higher, it's fine" standard. Not only that, Zelda 1's graphics have already been remade in Japan. They just need to take the graphics of that remake (which I hear sucks because they did massive alterations to the game, shrinking down the map by about half) and apply it to the original. I imagine at least OOT would look like the OOT remake in that bonus disk, since well it would be a lot easier to just reuse the port they already made of the game then to report it with less graphical enhancements.
So then, I sure hope Game Informer (which is notoriously WRONG) is correct.
"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)