Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Any chance for NO one Lives Forever 3

well its been 6 years since the 2nd no one lives forever was released, a long time indeed... :(for those of you who played the 1+2 part might consider it one of the funniest game ever created.lets hope that monolith might consider developing it right after the F.E.A.R 2 :)Any chance for NO one Lives Forever 3
No one lives forever games and avp2 were monoliths best games, together with tron 2.0. Fear is okay, but they should scrap those and make some more no one lives forever games in my opinion :)Any chance for NO one Lives Forever 3
It would be great if Monolith makes sequel to those games.
[QUOTE=''mimic-Denmark'']No one lives forever games and avp2 were monoliths best games, together with tron 2.0. Fear is okay, but they should scrap those and make some more no one lives forever games in my opinion :)[/QUOTE] ya but they kind of ditched the tron 3.0 when they realized that tron 2.0 sales were hellluva disapointed :cry:
I don't think so given that their attention is with FEAR which as we know taken off on console as well - that means big money. I wouldn't be surprised if in the next couple of years we see FEAR 3 or IV. When companies find a good thing (financially) they stick to it.
Monolith seems to be pretty set on the whole mediocre sequels to FEAR thing.
i agree. i don't see why game developers don't cash in on what people want. take TIE Fighter for instance. probably the most popular space sim of all time and yet it's been like 12 - 13 YEARS since the last installment.
The corporate line would blame it on piracy. For those of us who are not morons, it's the fact games are increasingly expensive to make, and NOLF2 didn't sell well. Seems to be a pattern with all the good PC games.
NOLF got a lot of critical accliam, but the sales weren't great. NOLF2 got even more ciritcal acclaim (even though it was nowhere near the game that the original was). They tried porting NOLF to consoles and it tanked. The twitch crowd whined that there was too much diaolgue and too much stealth and not enough action. Monolith tried to appeal to the droolers and put out Contract J.A.C.K., which got rid of all the spy stuff and just concentrated on run and gun. It received poor to mediorce reviews. NOLF fans were less than pleased by the design decisions and the mouth breathers than Monolith hoped to attract never materialized. I think that was pretty much the death of the series. I also think that 20th Century Fox still owns the rights to the NOLF franchise. Might be problematic getting the franchise released back to Monolith for future title development.

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