Rin Stowleigh <
rstow...@gmail.com> looked up from reading the entrails
of the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs say:
>On Sun, 24 Mar 2013 22:34:46 -0500, Xocyll <
Xoc...@kingston.net>
>wrote:
>
>>Warewolf <
warewol...@shaw.ca> looked up from reading the entrails
>>of the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs say:
>>
>>>Yesterday, I was thinking about games with the word 'Universe' in the title
>>>- Bust-A-Move Universe, Dance Dance Revolution Universe - the term tends to
>>>inspire concepts that go beyond the scope of the classic title and this has
>>>lead to lofty expectations that, if the reviews are any indication, the
>>>final products, all-too-often, failed to live up to.
>>>
>>>So, again, what would make a franchise game a 'Universe', in your eyes?
>>
>>Detailed rich backstory and mythos, and presumably something that makes
>>it unique compared to similar games.
>>
>>IE all the Elder scrolls games are set in the same universe.
>>
>>All the star wars games are set in the star wars universe etc.
>>
>>Your above two examples sound like general game company douchebaggery
>>bolting on buzzwords where they don't belong.
>
>When I read the question, the first thing that came to my mind is that
>marketing was just tacking on the word 'universe' to make it unique to
>their product (i.e. avoid getting sued by YoungMC for the term
>Bust-A-Move for example?). Then I realized this whole discussion is
>probably outside the scope of something I could contribute to, since I
>don't think I currently own any games with the word universe in the
>title.
I don't either, but the term has been in use for a particular meaning in
both the comic, RPG, Book and movie industries, so it really shouldn't
mean anything else in video game land.
>When I see it (or I should say notice it, since thats rare) in game
>titles, it's usually something like DC Universe Online, and in that
>case I just assumed it meant any character from DC comics might appear
>and/or comingle with each other, regardless of whether same
>combination of characters would make sense comingling in any existing
>DC comic. In other words sort of a free pass to include all the
>elements of a certain category together in an all-emcompassing way
>even if purists might have otherwise objected, yet defining some
>boundary (i.e. calling it DC Universe precludes them from including
>Marvel characters, so there are limits to the universe in that
>context).
Bingo, it's a self contained world (which may include other planets,
thus the "universe" term.
Star Trek is distinct from Star Wars is distinct from Babylon 5 is
distinct from, to jump genres, the universe described in E.E.Smiths
Lensmen books.
Each has a particular way things are done, "powers," space vessels,
space drive systems, etc that are unique (or mostly so) to their
universe - certainly the combination of things in each is unique.
Say warp drive, phasers and transporters and EVERYONE knows you're
talking about Star Trek, even the people who have never seen an episode.
Lightsabers ... enough said.
These guys are just bolting universe onto games which have no real story
at all to make it seem more exciting.
What's next, Solitaire Universe, Tic Tac Toe Universe, Tiddlywinks
Universe?