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Ich denke bis zur X02 werden weitere artikel dieser art folgen schließlich will niemand die Story verpasst haben falls M$ wircklich Rare kauft.
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Das NES ist eine Nintendokonsole, nicht ?Original geschrieben von Tabris
Snake Rattle & Roll (oder so ähnlich) fand ich auf dem NES ziemlich geil.
Nein, aber wenn du ältere Rare Games (also bevor sie Nintendo 2nd Party wurden) ansprichst, gehören die NES Games und auch einige SNES Games auch dazu. Und schlecht waren bei weitem nicht alles. Wenn ich da nur an Battletoads in Battlemaniac denke. :oOriginal geschrieben von Gaara
Das NES ist eine Nintendokonsole, nicht ?
Original geschrieben von Tabris
@Spanish: Stimmt, denn auf Perfect Dark Zero hat Nintendo das Trademark.
http://cube.totalgames.net/news/newsfull.epml?news.REF=1691&newsFormat.REF=9&newsType.REF=1It's looking almost certain that SFA will be the last GameCube exclusive Rare title, indeed, latest news suggests that it could be the last ever Rare GameCube title full stop. Read into that what you will. Surely that has to be the biggest hint we've ever given you?
Original geschrieben von Tabris
Das Copyright auf den Namen Perfect Dark hat Rare, aber auf Perfect Dark Zero und auf alle anderen von Rare verwendeten Titel seit sie 2nd Party sind, hat Nintendo das Trademark.
Suchst du eigentlich alle möglichen Seiten nach Rare Gerüchten ab oder was?Original geschrieben von sonicgroove
http://cube.totalgames.net/news/newsfull.epml?news.REF=1691&newsFormat.REF=9&newsType.REF=1
Original geschrieben von Tabris
Suchst du eigentlich alle möglichen Seiten nach Rare Gerüchten ab oder was?
http://totalgames.net/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=6&t=007963As far as I can tell...
* The Kongs belong to Nintendo
* Banjo, Kazooie, Joanna Dark and Conker all belong to Rare.
So that's probably how it'll be split. Now, while I don't want to say too much (for fear of being castrated by various sources), I can confirm the following:
* PDZero... not on the GC. Ever.
* Kameo ever seeing the light of day... er, nope.
* SFA is reportedly *gasp!* incredibly formulaic, shallow and aimed at kids, rather than being the Zelda beater we were all hoping for. Dang.
* Shigeru Miyamoto going to Twycross and doing a happy dance outside the Rare offices.
* Nintendo making a heck of a lot of money in the process.
One of the above truths is in fact a lie. Work it out yourselves...
Martin Mathers, Editor Cube Magazine
* Shigeru Miyamoto going to Twycross and doing a happy dance outside the Rare offices.
Rare deal for Microsoft
Rob Fahey 17:06 09/09/2002
Nintendo second-party becomes a Microsoft first-party
British developer Rare, the legendary studio founded by the Stamper brothers, is thought to have been bought by Microsoft in a deal worth between £250 million and £350 million – with an official announcement expected at X02 in Seville later this month.
The studio, which has traditionally been seen as one of Nintendo’s leading second-party development houses – producing key titles for the N64 such as Goldeneye, Perfect Dark, Banjo Kazooie and Jet Force Gemini – is currently working on Starfox Adventures for the GameCube, and the production of that title is thought to be unaffected by the deal.
The future of Rare’s other GameCube titles, however, is uncertain. Many of them may make the transition to the Xbox – with the forthcoming Perfect Dark 2 expected to be an Xbox exclusive title, for one. Work on the company’s Game Boy Advance titles is likely to continue unaffected, as Microsoft has already indicated a willingness to co-develop titles for that platform.
The strongest confirmation of the deal yet has come from sources within the company, who told us that employees were notified of the deal in the past fortnight. The Stamper family has made its intentions to leave the games industry clear for around two years, but a rumoured sale to Activision fell through when the number two publisher baulked at the asking price of the studio.
Nintendo is a major shareholder in Rare, owning approximately 49 per cent of the company; it’s thought that it will be selling its stake to Microsoft as part of the deal. Rare’s relationship with the Japanese platform holder has cooled significantly over the past few years, particularly due to the recent departure of long-time allies within Nintendo such as Howard Lincoln. Having persuaded vital Japanese giants such as Sega, Namco, Square and Capcom to develop for the Cube, Rare’s importance to Nintendo has diminished greatly, and the lure of Microsoft’s greenbacks seems to have been enough to convince them to part with their stake in the studio.