Sentences with phrase «licenced games like»

Not exact matches

Potential banana skins abound From simple things like Amazon's patent for reselling ebook licences (bound to have an impact on ebook sales especially of lead titles if it were ever to be put into practice) or like discovering that despite having a great product your brand just doesn't resonate with consumers beyond your core audience and hence you lose a bundle of cash trying to sell them tablets or realizing that your main competitor is not the rival publisher of literary novels or commercial non-fiction but a game in which trajectory considerations are a more important aspect of gameplay than would normally be considered cool and various music video fads from Gangnam Style to Harlem Shake.
It appears that the licence to produce a Cars 3 game didn't include access to any of the voice talent, and so Lightning sounds like someone doing an impression of a drunk Owen Wilson down a bad mobile phone connection.
Big licences like Spiderman help, but the company says 61 per cent of downloads are of its own brand games.
Anyone whose known me long enough could tell you that one of my game related fantasies for the longest time has been an All Star fighting game, featuring Sony's licenced characters, that would look and play like Super Smash Bros..
While it has its imperfections, it's certainly a game that was given a lot of love and attention during its development, and is therefore up there with the likes of the Batman Arkham games as one of the best uses of a famous licence.
Yes, we think that licenced vehicles and accessories are very important for a fully formed racing experience, but clearly, that depends on the individual design of the game in question and the kind of experience you would like to provide for players.
Creating the goliath company brings together a raft of Activision's properties, including Guitar Hero, Call of Duty, the Tony Hawk series and a range of licences that includes Spider - Man, X-Men, James Bond and Shrek, with Vivendi's slate of games which includes Blizzard's world - popular World of Warcraft and its Diablo and StarCraft stablemates and the likes of Crash Bandicoot and Spyro.
Really enjoying playing but I have since discovered it's not as easy to pick up and play as previous Gran Turismo games, Gone are the cup championships and having to pass your licences to play the more advanced races, this is just a series of singles races, on single tracks and trying to beat 3 levels of difficulty and the tracks are unlocked as you earn experience and level up, also there aren't as many tracks or cars as any of the previous versions and seems a little like the limited Prologue game that was released at a cheaper price, I'm assuming it's more geared towards online racing, which I haven't tried yet because sometimes you just want to play your way without interfering with somebody else's game, nothing worse than going into a race and have some random person ruin your game by crashing into you or just cheating their way to win.
So it's not because companies were allergic to Sega and the Master System, they were looking out for their interests as a business, the rule was if you want a licence to develop for the NES, you had to only develop for the NES, that rule probably wouldn't be possible anymore in the industry, but it was a time when it was still like the old west — unregulated and unrestricted, while Nintendo could get away with enforcing that, Sega could get away with selling non-age rated games.
The previously released level packs still play like traditional Lego game stages and as such still can be enjoyed by those who don't really care about the licence — I don't really care about Doctor Who but still thoroughly enjoyed the Doctor Who level pack.
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