I understood the post for most part. Helps that dutch and german look somewhat similair. =P
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I sometimes had the feeling, when looking at the special material on the DVDs, that TTG's games are done by some nerds who don't reflect a lot or life in their very own bubble where these things seem to be a whole lot funnier than outside. I'm sorry if this isn't true and it sounds unfair but these were my first impressions watching the material.
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Are you sure? My impression was that the humour in said licenced game matches the humour of the franchise the licence comes from.
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If the future of adventure games is riding old licences, loosing innovation were it would be interesting and giggling about teenager humour then i don't want it
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This is definitely not the case. There are still enough adventure games released that are original and aren't part of any licence. This may not seem the case with TellTale but to me it looks like that was a deliberate choice. And I like it so far. I like revisiting 'forgotten' franchises and seeing new life breath into them. It's huge fanservice to a lot of people. Fans of Sam and Max got new games. Fans of Wallace and Gromit got a new game. Fans of Monkey Island got a new game.
And now fans of BttF(like myself) get a game. =)
Visit
www.Adventuregamers.com and you'll see that enough adventure games are still released that aren't built upon an exisiting licence. Whether the games are of good quality is a different matter. In a world where there are countless of Adventure Game companies one is bound to handle the licenced material. And I am glad TellTale is that company.