Posted September 28, 2012
Why do people accuse certain games of being clones of other games? 'As brilliant as this game is, it's still such a rip-off of a game that, while predating this one, wasn't quite so good.' As if the developer of the newer game presented it as a completely original idea (which often isn't the case, as is revealed in interviews where the developer almost invariably cites inspirations from older games), hoping no one will notice any surreptitious acts of plagiarism.
A good example is Cortex Command, which, within twenty minutes of its introduction into the Steam Store, had a Discussion thread entitled 'Clonk Clone'. Or any blocky, procedurally-generated sandbox game post-Minecraft (which itself is a clone, if you want to call it that, of Infiniminer). If you really want to be picky, you might call Pong a rip-off of real-life tennis.
It seems to me that these accusations are filed against games that are set in a genre not often seen (the antithetical example these days would be 'tower defense' games and 'retro, 8-bit/16-bit styled platforming RPG adventure puzzle action!'), or are too similar to popular games for the comfort of those most rabid of fans (who are often oblivious to, or in denial of, the fact that they're favourite games, e.g. Final Fantasy MMCXVLIII and Call of Duty 40K or Worms: Hermaphroditic Haplotaxid Holocaust, are really just more of the same thing and add little to the series beyond some new shinies).
If you dig at a game long enough, you'll find it has at least one or two things in common with a game that came before it (though, admittedly, I'm hard-pressed to come up with a game similar to, but predating Lemmings; I'm sure someone will point it out to me shortly after posting this OP). More often than not, it's a matter of taste concerning the developer's 'personal touch', but sometimes these games that are eerily similar to earlier games are a case of 'it does the same thing, but it does it so much better'.
[edit]
I'm removing the 'tl;dr' tag from the end paragraph, as it doesn't properly summarize the whole of the post, and has lead at least one person to argue against something I never implied. If you won't bother to read the whole thing because you can't take five minuted out of your busy day to read a few two sentence paragraphs, don't bother replying to any one part of it.
A good example is Cortex Command, which, within twenty minutes of its introduction into the Steam Store, had a Discussion thread entitled 'Clonk Clone'. Or any blocky, procedurally-generated sandbox game post-Minecraft (which itself is a clone, if you want to call it that, of Infiniminer). If you really want to be picky, you might call Pong a rip-off of real-life tennis.
It seems to me that these accusations are filed against games that are set in a genre not often seen (the antithetical example these days would be 'tower defense' games and 'retro, 8-bit/16-bit styled platforming RPG adventure puzzle action!'), or are too similar to popular games for the comfort of those most rabid of fans (who are often oblivious to, or in denial of, the fact that they're favourite games, e.g. Final Fantasy MMCXVLIII and Call of Duty 40K or Worms: Hermaphroditic Haplotaxid Holocaust, are really just more of the same thing and add little to the series beyond some new shinies).
If you dig at a game long enough, you'll find it has at least one or two things in common with a game that came before it (though, admittedly, I'm hard-pressed to come up with a game similar to, but predating Lemmings; I'm sure someone will point it out to me shortly after posting this OP). More often than not, it's a matter of taste concerning the developer's 'personal touch', but sometimes these games that are eerily similar to earlier games are a case of 'it does the same thing, but it does it so much better'.
[edit]
I'm removing the 'tl;dr' tag from the end paragraph, as it doesn't properly summarize the whole of the post, and has lead at least one person to argue against something I never implied. If you won't bother to read the whole thing because you can't take five minuted out of your busy day to read a few two sentence paragraphs, don't bother replying to any one part of it.
Post edited September 28, 2012 by predcon