Gamezebo writes: "It's been an interesting couple of weeks here at Legacy Interactive. It's sort of like life imitating art - now that we're deep in the development of the Murder, She Wrote game, we're practically tripping over the bodies all over the office around here."
Some red-hot licenses just shouldn't be pursued. Here's five television properties that got their own game to humanity's eternal shame.
Who exactly is the audience for a Murder, She Wrote game? Oh, right. Your mom.
Also, my mom.
I'm sure there are some TV shows that would make good games...how about The Walking Dead? (I know they're already making one, but hold on I'm doing a bit)
It would be like Mass Effect meets Left 4 Dead, except it's 99% conversations and 1% zombie attacks.
TWD should not be a video game OR a tv series. It should just be the comic, although I am happy for Robert Kirkman.
How could this author include the Law and Order games (there have actually been a few of them) and not include the CSI games? At least the Law and Order games worked - the last time I played a CSI game it was broken out of the box.
David Mcmurdo from Wedotech writes:
"I've never been a man anyone could described as "trendy". When I'm not walking the streets wearing a purple chimp badge I'm either sitting listening to my Bowie dominated playlist or watching some cult film or other. So when James told me that the game of Murder, She Wrote was on his schedule I leapt for joy and readily agreed to review it myself because you know what? I bloody love Murder, She Wrote and I don't give a damn who knows it."
A.V. Club writes: "Fourteen years after Murder, She Wrote went off the air, a tie-in videogame has finally been released, just as demand had become a roiling river of frenzied anticipation. Yes, Jessica Fletcher, the widowed substitute English teacher turned successful novelist who turned down a glitzy life as an author in murder-filled New York City for a nice quiet life as an author in murder-filled Cabot Cove, Maine is back in five red-herring-filled mysteries."