Me: If you look at the world, and you look at languages, and you look at economies... if you were to try to target those parts of the world that in 15 years, 20 years will have taken a bigger
step than other parts of the world, where would you go?
-- Namco Bandai understands that fans want more Tales game in English — Time and money get in the way — Namco Bandai has taken
steps to alleviate the issues above, and hopefully we can now look forward to seeing more Tales games worldwide — It's been difficult to fit the game on the 3DS card due to size restrictions — Voice data in particular was challenging to put on the card and feels they solved the problem while keeping the quality high — «Every
part of the game, with the exception
of the animated cut - scenes, has been redone in 3D» — Yoshizumi believes this makes the game seem more real / immersive
than before — Character models rebuilt to improve performance — Rest
of the game has been ported over seamlessly — Some changes made to «in - game parameters» to compensate for control differences — No
other additions, no new weapons / artes — No communication features (StreetPass, SpotPass)-- Namco Bandai have talked about a sequel, but haven't yet come up with something that would be good enough for a full game — Yoshizumi says he appreciates the comments he receives on Twitter from worldwide fans, and he hopes that more Tales games can make it over in the future — Load times have been improved on significantly — Steadier frame rate (may have been referring to the
world map specifically)-- Skits will remain unvoiced
Despite one looking better
than the
other, they certainly are both very poor choices and should not be a
part of your plan, but rather only a
stepping stone into attaining the skills needed to use in the real
world and to bring your very own vision to life.
The oil sands are still a tiny
part of the
world's carbon problem — they account for less
than a tenth
of one percent
of global CO2 emissions — but to many environmentalists they are the thin end
of the wedge, the first
step along a path that could lead to
other, even dirtier sources
of oil: producing it from oil shale or coal.