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Dave Gibbons - 25th Anniversary Interview - GameWatcher

From GameWatcher: "Dave Gibbons recalls his work with Revolution for their 25th anniversary. The interview is footage from the filming of the 6-episode history of Revolution, shot for the digital timeline DVD which is included in the collection."

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gamewatcher.com
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Revolution 25th Anniversary Collection Now Available For Preorder

Revolution, creators of Broken Sword and Beneath a Steel Sky, are releasing a special collector's edition to celebrate their 25th anniversary.

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gamespew.com
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The Revolution: the 25th Anniversary Collection coming exclusively to PC on 11th March, 2016

From GameWatcher: "Revolution Software are celebrating their 25th Anniversary with a special collection of the company's full catalogue of adventure games, including the Broken Sword series, Beneath a Steel Sky, Lure of the Temptress and In Cold Blood. The ‘Revolution: the 25th Anniversary Collection’ will be released on the 11th March, 2016 at a price of £29.99 / €39,99 exclusively for the PC."

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gamewatcher.com
tanukisuit3029d ago

I think it's about time I jump into this series. Good to see they will package everything into one neat, little unit.

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Games that should have had sequels (Part 2)

Chalgyr's Game Room writes:

A continuation of the article from Pierre-Yves yesterday, Hamza now shares his thoughts on the matter. We all have games that just resonated for us. Maybe they were part of a series that came to an end (when was the last proper Shining Force game?) or a single game that just never garnered even one follow-up title (I'm looking at you, Heavenly Sword). Here are a handful of other games we would make a case for.

Narco Police

In 1988, Wasteland was released to the MS-DOS to widespread critical acclaim. So influential was the game that it played an instrumental role in the development of the now-iconic Fallout series, which is considered the spiritual successor to Wasteland. In 2014 a sequel was announced, and in the following year the cleverly titled Wasteland 2 made its way to the PC. Among the key people who worked on it were Chris Avellone and Brian Fargo - two of the most notable personalities behind the first two Fallout games. If Wasteland could finally get a proper sequel nearly three decades later, then I think another game from the same era should also deserve similar respect and follow-up.