Showing posts with label demakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label demakes. Show all posts

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Showcase: PieceOfToast's 8-bit Demakes


"BioShock"


"Portal 2"


"Deus Ex: Human Revolution"

[PieceOfToast's Deviantart]

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Penney Designs: Retro-Modern 2600 Games

I posted about Penney Designs' Lost adventure game a while back. I thought I'd posted these faux-2600 game cartridges of demade games as well, but I guess not!







Wednesday, November 17, 2010

201 Mega Men: A Sampling


~captainslam has created a massive compilation of 201 videogame protagonists done up in the style of MegaMan, and it's a thing of beauty to behold. Above you'll find a few of my personal favorites, which is only a tiny sampling of the overall piece. Lookit that little PipBoy!  Adorable.  And DEADLY.  Radiation deadly!

Click on the image to be taken to the full-sized (6948x4032) images.

Gaming Triptych: 5x5 MegaMan, Metroid, Mario (Alexander S. Shen)

"rock, man." by Alexander S. Shen

"it's a girl" by Alexander S. Shen

"italian plumber" by Alexander S. Shen

As always, clicking on the images above will take you to a larger version.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Amazing Races!

Tron, if it had been released in the 1960s and had titles designed by the legendary Saul Bass:


Truly, this is why I get up in the morning.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Lost: The Adventure

In honour of the fact that Season 6 of Lost starts in less than a week!



Silly Jack. You should know that you can't pick up fire, Hurley, or coconuts.

Actually, maybe you should try those coconuts again. Try throwing a can of Dharma peas at the tree. You'll need it when you meet that polar bear later.

(Penney Design has 8-bit movie-game mockups for Wall-E, The Dark Knight, and more right over here.)

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Demade, As Per Your Requirements

Demakes. By now you're probably familiar with the concept: take a contemporary game and remake it as it might have appeared on an earlier platform. The term and concept, coined by Phil Fish over at the TIGSource forums (THE definitive repository for independent demakes!), are a tongue-in-cheek commentary on the whole short-on-ideas-but-big-on-fan-franchises mentality of today's game development industry - It's hilarious to imagine Mirror's Edge on the Atari 2600 or S.T.A.L.K.E.R. on an XT with EGA graphics, but at the same time, we're still playing the latest Castlevania, Metroid or Wolfenstein. If games can be updated, why can't the reverse also be true?

And truthfully, there's some very impressive work being done in the indie demake quadrant - again, much of it stemming from The Independent Gaming Source's Bootleg Demake Compo in the summer of 2008.

So without further ado, I give you a small sampling of games dragged kicking and screaming into a generation of hardware limitations they were never meant for.


Megaman 4kb (C64 Demake of Megaman)





Hold Me Closer, Giant Dancer (Shadow of the Colossus Demake for the TRS-80 III)



Final Fantasy 7 (Demake for the NES)


Codename: Gordon (Half-Life\Half-Life 2 Sidescroller Demake, available on Steam)


Soundless Mountain II (Demake of Silent Hill II for the NES)


Portal: Still Alive (Flash-based Demake of Portal)


ASCIIpOrtal (ASCII Demake of Portal)


Super 3D Portals 6 (Atari 2600 Demake of Portal)



A list of the games being demade by the guys over at TIGSource can be found here, as well as the official catalogue over here.

And I would be remiss if I didn't mention the fantastic Gameboy demake mockups, in glorious grey\green\beige, by the folks over at wayofthepixel:

(Bioshock, by CroM)

(Psychonauts, by HMC)

(American McGee's Alice, by Arachne)

(Okami, by Doppleganger)

(Sam and Max Hit The Road, by KhrisMUC)

(World of Warcraft, by Arachne)

(Resident Evil 4, by Bouzolf)


And then, of course, you have the other side of the coin: remakes of retro games, a designation which apparently only requires that the game in question be updating to a platform released subsequently to the one the original came out on. Retro Remakes has a great list of remakes both current and in development. This deserves a post in itself, but in the meantime I'll leave you with this, from the as-yet-unreleased Maniac Mansion remake by German-based indie developers Vampyre Games (and which looks downright brilliant):