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Dune II and the three rules of a good licensed game

34 points| tosh | 7 years ago |gamesindustry.biz | reply

13 comments

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[+] dvh|7 years ago|reply
I played it on 386 with CM8330 sound blaster clone, and although I've heard the soundtrack many times later on, different versions too, it never sounded as good as it did back then. I wonder if it is just my imagination.
[+] marak830|7 years ago|reply
(rough as hell memory here), I'm almost certain there were two different versions due to the same reason myself!
[+] CM30|7 years ago|reply
Yep, the rules definitely make sense here.

Key being 'make a good game to begin with'. Too many licensed games just take the IP, slap it on a poorly done, generic template and call it a day.

Of course, there are some exceptions to every rule here. Ecks vs Sever was a series of two amazing video games based on one of the worst films of all time. In that case, ignoring the IP altogether was probably the best move.

[+] lucianf|7 years ago|reply
Am I the only one who saw IP mentioned like a hundred times without knowing what it meant?
[+] grenoire|7 years ago|reply
Intellectual property, i.e. the Dune branding/universe in this case.
[+] jplayer01|7 years ago|reply
> It's also worth a few notes on the IP of Dune

He says that before he starts using IP everywhere.

Also, the title literally says "licensed game".

[+] eps|7 years ago|reply
That read... forced. More to plug this guy's company than to offer any actually interesting insight.
[+] marak830|7 years ago|reply
I read your comment before reading the article and I almost feel as if it's(the article) been ripped from somewhere and then some has been thrown on at the end. I definitely agree with your position.

(Also dune 2 was definitely the first game to get me super interested in pc's, :referring to another comment about nostalgia).

[+] bayindirh|7 years ago|reply
Actually I've played Dune-II for a very long time on my 486, and have many fond memories from that era.

Maybe because of that, the read didn't feel forced. It also enlightened me, why everything in the game clicked so well in my head.

I still play it in DOSBox sometimes. It's worth a spin.