Mr Khan said:
Tiny Huge Island was entirely designed around the multipath concept. Some worlds didn't work that way, but many of them did. The second star of Lethal Lava Land gave you two choices, one of which was more platform intensive, and you could use powerups to do the stage differently (the very essence of variation in 2D Mario, which is otherwise linear as a tarmac but for your ability to access different paths with powerups). In some cases you could use the cannons to traverse space if you were brave Some stages and stars were highly restrictive (especially the stars that did what became standard in Sunshine: that if you wanted Star 2 you had to select Star 2 at the level start, or it wouldn't even be possible), but many were wide open. Hell, i never do Shifting Sand Land the "correct" way unless i'm going for 8 red coins |
So any freedom in these games should be more universal, as in try to avoid any stages that require a set path.
A flashy-first game is awesome when it comes out. A great-first game is awesome forever.
Plus, just for the hell of it: Kelly Brook at the 2008 BAFTAs








