Posted: 2005-09-28 11:52pm
HOwever, they did popularise CD drives...
Get your fill of sci-fi, science, and mockery of stupid ideas
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Actually, considering that the cut-scenes were part of what helped sell Final Fantasy VII and VIII, I wouldn't call them flops. In fact, back in the day, there were websites dedicated to hosting cut-scenes from video games for download, and people even sold Video CDs on eBay of Final Fantasy cut-scenes because people liked them so much. The ending sequence for Final Fantasy VIII was very well-done in particular.Dennis Toy wrote:no one ever mentioned this one, FMV ( Full-Motion Video) in the 1990's, FMV was supposed to be the future of gaming, it was hyped, and advertised, and even pushed upon the market. The truth was this was a total waste of time and computer power. Full Motion Video did not add anything to the game other than be a waste of memory.
I wouldn't call it a flop, but it was Nintendo's greatest fuck up. With that they created their greatest competator, and (probably) in some small part lured Microsoft to the industry.General Zod wrote:Would Nintendo's CD add-on for the Super NES with Sony count as a flop? Even though it technically never really got off the ground? All the hype surrounding it, and it never materialised. Kinda sad really.
It seems like an awful waste of money to bury millions of extra copies of the game though. Expecially when you can reuse them, and especially since there is no photo of Howard Scott Warsaw standing on top of the pileDooey Jo wrote:However, Snopes says there is...Ford Prefect wrote:Just to ruin everyone's day, there is no ET landfill. *snip*
and it's what brought the before then good sierra company into chapter 11Dennis Toy wrote:no one ever mentioned this one, FMV ( Full-Motion Video) in the 1990's, FMV was supposed to be the future of gaming, it was hyped, and advertised, and even pushed upon the market. The truth was this was a total waste of time and computer power. Full Motion Video did not add anything to the game other than be a waste of memory.
fuck yeah, they should have made the Wing Commander Movie with Malcolm McDowell, Amber Lynn and Mark HamilArthur_Tuxedo wrote:Indeed, in the very rare instances where FMV was done properly, it was very cool. Wing Commander 3, for instance, was like being treated to a feature film in addition to a great game. Based on reviews, I'd wager that WC3 was a better movie than the actual Wing Commander movie.
Actually, I assumed Toy was refering to those total FMV video games that were part of the major push of the multimedia movement, which amounted to pretty much nothing more than interactive video novels, rather than the use of FMVs several years later.Durandal wrote:Actually, considering that the cut-scenes were part of what helped sell Final Fantasy VII and VIII, I wouldn't call them flops. In fact, back in the day, there were websites dedicated to hosting cut-scenes from video games for download, and people even sold Video CDs on eBay of Final Fantasy cut-scenes because people liked them so much. The ending sequence for Final Fantasy VIII was very well-done in particular.Dennis Toy wrote:no one ever mentioned this one, FMV ( Full-Motion Video) in the 1990's, FMV was supposed to be the future of gaming, it was hyped, and advertised, and even pushed upon the market. The truth was this was a total waste of time and computer power. Full Motion Video did not add anything to the game other than be a waste of memory.
No, I'd call them a stop-gap solution for story-telling. Now that hardware can handle more polygons, it's more feasible to simply use the in-game engine for cut-scenes. But when console gamers were stuck with the PSX, which couldn't even do bilinear texture filtering and operated at 320x240 resolution, a big selling point for many games was the cut-scene artistry.
You had Ginger Lynn Allen playing the role of a grease monkey. She could've greased my monkey any time.Based on reviews, I'd wager that WC3 was a better movie than the actual Wing Commander movie.
Malcolm McDowell was actually originally cast to play Admiral Tolwyn. He had some last minute engangements which prevented him from playing the part.fuck yeah, they should have made the Wing Commander Movie with Malcolm McDowell
Or the FMV from Privateer 2. Clive Owen and Christopher Walken in a computer game...although to be fair, both games were quite a bit of time after the original FMV craze.Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:Indeed, in the very rare instances where FMV was done properly, it was very cool. Wing Commander 3, for instance, was like being treated to a feature film in addition to a great game. Based on reviews, I'd wager that WC3 was a better movie than the actual Wing Commander movie.