| o_O.Q said: now you are clearly readiny my posts and responding so i therefore have to assume that your eyes are in fact working if your eyes are indeed working then i can only conclude that you are being willfully dishonest if you can try to tell me that the game i posted does not look pretty much the same as splatoon " the description of the game sounds nothing like Splatoon" the fact that you have to ignore the actual gameplay video and base your argument off of a description of the game is telling isn't it? if this is where this discussion is going then its pointless to go further "Splatoon will be yet another great Nintendo franchise." so? this is relevant how? plants vs zombies is a great franchise with a sequal coming out next year... this is also about as relevant as the price of tea in china |
The actual gameplay video of Color Wars looked awful and I saw nowhere the ability to transform into a squid to hide and move faster on your colour ink (or climb vertical surfaces). I didn't see a single player campaign that combined shooter elements with platforming either. The Colour Wars game uses generic avatars while Splatoon uses the well liked inklings (and hopefully soon the octolings). Splatoon has a wide variety of original weaponry like the paint rollers, ink brushes or buckets. Colour Wars has exactly one generic gun. Splatoon has quite an unusual but charming soundtrack (the soundtrack cd sold 43k copies in its first week in Japan, making it the best seller that week) while Colour Wars has generic music. Splatoon has a beautiful and rather unique artstyle while Color Wars looks like it was put together in 6 weeks with pre-existing assets. I can go on for a while you know.
"The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must" - Thoukydides







