Silver Style Still Trying For Fallout 3
- Ooe
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Give the rights to Troika, dammit!
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Seattle or bust!
- Franz Schubert
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- Stainless
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Looks cool. I might go see if I can buy it over the weekend.EvoG wrote:OMG STAINLESS!! http://www.nival.com/eng/s2_info.html
Listen all of you...Silent Storm will REDEFINE how you think of tactical combat let alone turn-based games period. This game dethroned XCom as my all time fav tactical game. I have so many amazing experiences with this game, I'll have to share when I'm done.
No one who loves the genre should miss this...no one who's played it could poo-poo it with a straight face.
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this thread is pretty farking hilarious. Yeah who better than a foreign dev house who's main credits are a diablo clone and a bargain bin tactics game to develop the next installment of a historic *RPG* franchise. I highlight RPG because this is probably one of toughest game genres to develop for the PC. I found it quite funny that someone in this thread said that if SS acquired the rights to FO that the old devs might be drawn to it.
Probably one of the dumbest things I've ever heard. That might of been the case with a resume as paper thin as Pukie's but its not the case for guys like Fargo, Taylor, Cain, Boyarsky, and even the much lampooned MCA. In fact, now that I've mentioned those guys I should probably bring up the fact that all Silver Style is doing with their blind stabbing at a franchise is driving up the price for the companies who would better job with it. (Troika, Obsidian, InXile--in that order)
Companies that actually have folks who contributed to the original design process working for them. What you're proposing is much like the sequel to 2001: a space odyssey. Something that would probably generate a hearty W-T-F from fans of the original... not that FOBOS hasn't already accomplished that... but I'm going off on a rant on something that's not going to happen. Bottomline is, the asshats at SS are thumping the Fallout drum on their marketing campaign and its getting very farking annoying.
Probably one of the dumbest things I've ever heard. That might of been the case with a resume as paper thin as Pukie's but its not the case for guys like Fargo, Taylor, Cain, Boyarsky, and even the much lampooned MCA. In fact, now that I've mentioned those guys I should probably bring up the fact that all Silver Style is doing with their blind stabbing at a franchise is driving up the price for the companies who would better job with it. (Troika, Obsidian, InXile--in that order)
Companies that actually have folks who contributed to the original design process working for them. What you're proposing is much like the sequel to 2001: a space odyssey. Something that would probably generate a hearty W-T-F from fans of the original... not that FOBOS hasn't already accomplished that... but I'm going off on a rant on something that's not going to happen. Bottomline is, the asshats at SS are thumping the Fallout drum on their marketing campaign and its getting very farking annoying.
The answer to your first question is shaddup.
The first was a BG clone which was flawed. In fact as flawed as Stonekeep, the only RPG experience Tim Cain had before Fallout.Killzig wrote:Yeah who better than a foreign dev house who's main credits are a diablo clone and a bargain bin tactics game to develop the next installment of a historic *RPG* franchise. I highlight RPG because this is probably one of toughest game genres to develop for the PC.
Nice fact. I call it assumption and a pretty far-fetched one it is. It looks like you just make up stuff against SSE.Killzig wrote:In fact, now that I've mentioned those guys I should probably bring up the fact that all Silver Style is doing with their blind stabbing at a franchise is driving up the price for the companies who would better job with it. (Troika, Obsidian, InXile--in that order)
From all the companies they are most likely to get the license. And if you call that a marketing campaign I don't know what you said about Enter the Matrix.Killzig wrote:Bottomline is, the asshats at SS are thumping the Fallout drum on their marketing campaign and its getting very farking annoying.
- DarkUnderlord
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Bobbin wrote:The first was a BG clone which was flawed. In fact as flawed as Stonekeep, the only RPG experience Tim Cain had before Fallout.Killzig wrote:Yeah who better than a foreign dev house who's main credits are a diablo clone and a bargain bin tactics game to develop the next installment of a historic *RPG* franchise. I highlight RPG because this is probably one of toughest game genres to develop for the PC.
So the only RPG experience he had at the time wasn't even RPG, it was critical error handling code!! The reality is that Mr C is a programmer and made a lot of good shit for Interplay well before he started on Fallout (as you can see). There's also the fact that the whole company (at that time anyway) had a whole bunch of people with a whole bunch of RPG experience.Moby Games wrote:Moby Games on Tim Cain: Best known as the producer, lead programmer and designer of Fallout (the 1997 RPG of the Year), Tim Cain has worked in the game industry since 1982. He started as a programmer on Grand Slam Bridge, published by Electronic Arts in 1985. After attending college and receiving a B.S. and M.S. in Computer Science, he worked at Interplay Productions from 1992 to 1998. In addition to Fallout, he was lead programmer on Bard's Tale Construction Set and Rags to Riches, and he also designed and programmed GNW, a user interface and OS-abstraction library, which supports Fallout, Star Fleet Academy, M.A.X., Atomic Bomberman, and several other Interplay titles. He also wrote critical error handling code for Stonekeep and digital sound mixing code for Star Trek 25th Anniversary CD-ROM edition. After helping to complete the initial design for Fallout 2, he left Interplay along with Leonard Boyarsky and Jason Anderson to form Troika Games.
However, I've never really personally bought the "experience counts" argument. Tim has "the knack". A few other designers have "the knack". Couple that with experience and a track record and you can build an impression on how good their next project might be.
Do I think Silver Style are doing anything but talking out of their arse about the FO license though? No. Interplay have said time and again that the Fallout license is not for sale. Sure, that might change, but Silver Style haven't reached any kind of agreement at this stage. I'll wait until that happens before worrying about it further.
Another point I like to make is that I don't like really bad English speaking foreign companies making English games. Think "All your base are belong to us" here. Behold --> Fallout 3!
Interesingly enough, history would prove this to be the case. Bidding wars have a tendency to drive prices up. Do you really have something that proves other-wise?Bobbin wrote:Nice fact. I call it assumption and a pretty far-fetched one it is. It looks like you just make up stuff against SSE.Killzig wrote:In fact, now that I've mentioned those guys I should probably bring up the fact that all Silver Style is doing with their blind stabbing at a franchise is driving up the price for the companies who would better job with it. (Troika, Obsidian, InXile--in that order)
Yeah, Killzig called shit on this one. You swallowed the marketing campaign hook, line and sinker. Go buy "the Fall" now!!Bobbin wrote:From all the companies they are most likely to get the license. And if you call that a marketing campaign I don't know what you said about Enter the Matrix.
- Role-Player
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As stated in the Troika site, Tim Cain "designed and programmed GNW, a user interface and OS-abstraction library utilized in many Interplay games. "DarkUnderlord wrote:So the only RPG experience he had at the time wasn't even RPG, it was critical error handling code!! The reality is that Mr C is a programmer and made a lot of good shit for Interplay well before he started on Fallout (as you can see).
Your idols speak so much of the abyss, yet your morals only run as deep as the surface.
Yup... the world would be a much better place without Operation Flashpoint, IL-2 Sturmovik and Silent Storm... we could all play the much more innovative and original American games insteadAnother point I like to make is that I don't like really bad English speaking foreign companies making English games
Not to forget Gothic, Mafia, Stalker, Max Payne, Outcast...Hertston wrote:Yup... the world would be a much better place without Operation Flashpoint, IL-2 Sturmovik and Silent Storm... we could all play the much more innovative and original American games insteadAnother point I like to make is that I don't like really bad English speaking foreign companies making English games
- Role-Player
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Time and time again? They rejected Tim Cain, otherwise they pretty much buried another Fallout on PC, so yes, that might change. And no, SSE didn't reach any kind of agreement, but I also don't think they pulled this out their arse. Why should they risk their integrity by telling stories?DarkUnderlord wrote:Do I think Silver Style are doing anything but talking out of their arse about the FO license though? No. Interplay have said time and again that the Fallout license is not for sale. Sure, that might change, but Silver Style haven't reached any kind of agreement at this stage. I'll wait until that happens before worrying about it further.
I partially agree with you here. Playing Fallout in German was okay, but it felt much better playing the same game in english because it was the language the game was supposed to be. But on the other hand the translators of the german Fallout made a terrible job so I don't know how valid that is. I know of a whole lot of other translations that did the job very fine. I think you don't worry so much about the language but about the american feeling of Fallout. But considering games like Max Payne, GTA or Mafia there are a lot of games from foreign countries which had an american feeling to them.DarkUnderlord wrote:Another point I like to make is that I don't like really bad English speaking foreign companies making English games. Think "All your base are belong to us" here. Behold --> Fallout 3!
Bobbin wrote:Nice fact. I call it assumption and a pretty far-fetched one it is. It looks like you just make up stuff against SSE.Killzig wrote:In fact, now that I've mentioned those guys I should probably bring up the fact that all Silver Style is doing with their blind stabbing at a franchise is driving up the price for the companies who would better job with it. (Troika, Obsidian, InXile--in that order)
You see. Even works the other way around. No one can prove anything. To start a bidding war you need at least two bidding parties. For now I know only of one which is SSE.DarkUnderlord wrote:Interesingly enough, history would prove this to be the case. Bidding wars have a tendency to drive prices up. Do you really have something that proves other-wise?
There are quite some aspects I criticize about The Fall - character models, interface graphics, pa atmosphere. I won't just go out and buy it, but there is a lot of stuff going for it. And quite some stuff brought in by the community (well, not DAC, suggestions from DAC are obviously not accepted ). I didn't swallow the marketing campaign (still don't know why you insist on calling this a campaign), but I honestly like the way the community is treated by SSE.DarkUnderlord wrote:Yeah, Killzig called shit on this one. You swallowed the marketing campaign hook, line and sinker. Go buy "the Fall" now!!
In Norway, English is like our second language. You can strike a conversation with more or less any Norwegian in English. Point is that we rarely ask you "How is you?". And if Carsten is as uptaken of making a good Fallout 3 as he says (and I believe he is), he would probably have a US part of his team (ex. BIS people for instance) do the dialogue. He understands his limitations language wise, and have admitted as much.Role-Player wrote:I believe the point were the problems in translation, not their qualities. The "all your base..." comment should have been a tip.
Greetings from Olav (Staff at http://www.strategycore.co.uk , Slaughter)