With its rainbow-colored foundation of charm and beauty, Okabu could have been great. Unfortunately, its rigid pacing, overbearing guidance and general lack of polish hold it just under the waterline set by its more competent peers and forefathers. Here’s hoping a sequel could muster a little bit of faith in its player and give us the indie darling that I know Okabu had the potential to be.
Sony are “a pillar of support” to independent developers looking to take on ambitious projects, according to Okabu developer Simon Oliver.
Credit goes to Sony for continuing to support indie devs.
This is what Microsoft purported to do at the beginning of the 360's lifecycle but ended up hemorrhaging indie devs unintentionally with its overly-stringent requirements. The goodwill to support them was there to begin with (see XNA etc) but MS seem to have lost focus on that.
Indie devs do represent the future and cannot be neglected. Sony clearly recognise this and I think its high time MS do so too (if they don't already). The voices of discontent amongst indie developers regarding the 360 are getting louder by the minute.
I get it that small sites like 'beefjack.com' have to steal developer-statements from proper sources like a gamasutra dev-post-mortem.
But the least the article-writer could do is have his own opinion on the game, rather than mentioning metacritic.
i.e. make a impression-article on the game, or review if he likes it enough to finnish it.
That way they might start to get some original content after a while, and make it more worthwile to go there.
How about that - constructive criticism on N4G? :)
well sony did create a pub fund for indie developers to get started on creating games for their platforms. they even handed out free vita dev kits to various indie devs so here is hoping we will start seeing more indie games for the vita.
this is one area that sony has learned to embrace whereas before i did not think it mattered much during the kutaragi regime.
Okabu centers around the conflict between two tribes – the Yorubo and the Doza. Many generations ago, a ideological rift tore the population into two factions – those that felt a deep affinity with nature and wanted to maintain a simple life in harmony with the environment, and those that felt that their life could be improved by harnessing machinery to exploit the land...
Chris writes "If you hadn’t noticed, Okabu has a brand new patch up on PSN (Both US and EU versions have be updated). Simon Oliver, founder over at HandCircus, told Ben in a recent email that 'we made some tweaks to the gameplay to reduce frustrations some players were experiencing.'"