So, it’s a Butt-Hydra?
So, it’s a Butt-Hydra?
Be preoared then: https://revolutionarygamesstudio.com/ https://store.steampowered.com/app/1779200/Thrive/
Actually, they working on the microbe stage for years now, but their goal is actually the whole Spore experience.
But you would not argue that F:NV is the spiritual “successor” to those movies just because they were referenced.
If I didn’t know about Hotline Miami and you told me about like: “It’s like somebody made a new Hitman game!” I would be completely lost playing the game. Whole different perspective, style, flow. IMO being a “successor” implies more than just similar elements or references.
That said, wtaching out for examples I do not find so many other, that I think are similiarly weak as the Hitman/Hotline one. So it may be the exception in the list.
The used definition is sometimes really broad here. I mean, ok, Dead Space to Callisto Protocol or Titan Quest to Grim Dawn is obvious but Hotline Miami is the Spiritual Successor to Hitman because… you are have to kill people and when you fail you go try again? Very weak. Just being influenced or having a vaguely similar theme shouldn’t make it a “successor”.
That’s because our all file systems are god’s trash can.
The part with “menaces with spikes” sounds more like Dwarf Fortress
It’s going to be an indepedent new story with a new protagonist, according to an article on RPS.
I am also not familiar but as OP said,
With way less disabling abilities the PCs fun stuff isn’t nullified and foes don’t get CC’ed to death.
just means that there are no/very few PC control abilities? So the only way to deal with it in DnD would be to forbid them.
I played Monster Sanctuary for quite some time and found it quite charming. I don’t know how it compares to Casette Beasts though.
So they aren’t vampires? Huh.
Started Noita again. Got to the Mushrooms but got thrashed by a Pikkuturso. Good times.
Yes, but also:
So no crying historians in that story. She researched, proposed an article and the community said: “Good idea!” The whole “Oh, all those fine scientists laughed about the average joe/jane!” is just a common tale in those stories.