Game of Thrones definitely. The series (haven't read the books) are very character-driven. There's not a whole lot of action in the show, and with a gameplay like TWD that would make for an intense experience in the realm of Game of Thrones.
With seven kingdoms there might as well be seven seasons, each one from one of the kingdoms.
The only one of these that I know anything about is Lord of The Rings, which I think would be cool This may be a bit off topic, but I would just like to mention the TV show called Psych! I think that would make a great telltale game Also the aforementioned Sherlock would be great too.
Are we talking about an adaptation of Sherlock the TV series, complete with floating text and lightning fast powers of observation? If so, I vote YES.
I don't know how they'd do it, but they should at least give it a try.
No, I’m not referring to the TV show, nor am I referring to the Guy Ritchie movies or the Adventure Company game series. Something original, for a change!
I know this was said in many other threads but... ANIMANIACS!!! If there's one group of carton characters I might adore more than the Homestar Runner Gang it would be these guys. The witty and charming humor is right up Telltale's ally, it would be perfect!
I know this was said in many other threads but... ANIMANIACS!!! If there's one group of carton characters I might adore more than the Homestar Runner Gang it would be these guys. The witty and charming humor is right up Telltale's ally, it would be perfect!
Those guys would be perfect for a humorous adventure game... I just wonder how they should make a game with them without the puzzles turning all nonsensical (which admittedly would add an interesting touch).
And now that we're on the subject of cartoon characters, how about a Tiny Toons adventure game?
Ugh. The Jeremy Brett series was badly cast, badly acted, badly scripted, and badly directed. And that's just the *good* episodes.
In my opinion. In fact, Sherlock Holmes fans seem to be split 50/50 on whether ITV did a good job of it or not. Whereas "Sherlock" is, at worst, the most recent in a loooooong line of people taking an axe to the original stories. (There are probably still people running letter-writing campaigns against Eille Norwood).
The last series or two were notable for Jeremy Brett looking very ill as his dedication to the role was wearing on him. His manic depression was really in full swing by that point. It's actually kind of hard to watch, in retrospect.
Ideas I've said before (but in other topics), OH, and some new ones too!:
Arrested Development: The Adventure Game
Biker Mice From Mars: The Adventure Game
Curb Your Enthusiasm: The Adventure Game
Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas: The Adventure Game
Futurama: The Adventure Game
Mr. Show: The Adventure Game
Peanut Butter Bandit: The Adventure Game
Seinfeld: The Adventure Game
South Park: The Adventure Game
Star Wars: The Adventure Game
Street Sharks: The Adventure Game
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Adventure Game
Terminator: The Adventure Game
The Beverly Hillbillies: The Adventure Game
The Red Green Show: The Adventure Game
The Simpsons: The Aventure Game
The Three Stooges: The Adventure Game
Take your pick, Telltale. Oh, and if you want to adapt Peanut Butter Bandit to an adventure game, just give me a ring.
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen: the Game.
It could certainly allow for a nice replacement to Monkey Island as a comedic adventure series, but with a more . . . heroic hero than good ole Guybrush, which allows a completely different sort of humor and character than Monkey Island. I don't think they should be strict retellings of his adventures, but as they have done with established series -- new adventures in the mold of the old ones.
Arsene Lupin: the Game.
Much less over-the-top, Lupin's very fit to an adventure game setting -- something just barely touched upon by Frogware's Sherlock Holmes games.
Something involving conspiracies: the Game.
I don't know. Majestic-12, Mothman, aliens, stuff like that. That'd be interesting, especially if done as a homage to '50s sci fi shows like the Outer Limits. But that's already sorta been touched upon with S&M: The Devil's Playhouse.
Spy fiction thing: the Game.
Who else imagines Telltale making an adventure game where you have to escape a death trap laid by a Bond-esque villain using only stuff in the room and your inventory? I can!
The Goonies: the Game
SLOTH. LOVE. CHUNK!
The Spirit: the Game
The episodic nature would be perfect for this highly influential comic book hero.
The Mercury Men: the Game
If you don't know what the Mercury Men is, it's a really, really neat sci-fi show on the internet, split into 10 different episodes, each of about 7 or 8 minutes in length. Look it up if you like Indiana Jones and Star Wars, as they are both huge inspirations on the series.
Also, seconded on the Star Trek adventure game, for sure!
The Hunger Games trilogy is not about the actual games, though. The games are merely a tool by which the Capitol can oppress the outer districts.
The very idea that it would make a good adventure game, when the series isn't about adventure or exploring or anything like that, just doesn't compute for me.
EDIT: The only way that it could work is if you controlled a character outside the confines of the original story (a la Lord of the Rings: The Third Age). Katniss herself has too much emotional stuff going on, and I would think that an "adventure" is the very last thing she would call her experiences in the books.
Ideas I've said before (but in other topics), OH, and some new ones too!:
Arrested Development: The Adventure Game
Biker Mice From Mars: The Adventure Game
Curb Your Enthusiasm: The Adventure Game
Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas: The Adventure Game
Futurama: The Adventure Game
Mr. Show: The Adventure Game
Peanut Butter Bandit: The Adventure Game
Seinfeld: The Adventure Game
South Park: The Adventure Game
Star Wars: The Adventure Game
Street Sharks: The Adventure Game
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Adventure Game
Terminator: The Adventure Game
The Beverly Hillbillies: The Adventure Game
The Simpsons: The Aventure Game
The Three Stooges: The Adventure Game
Take your pick, Telltale. Oh, and if you want to adapt Peanut Butter Bandit to an adventure game, just give me a ring.
I'm not Telltale, but I'm gonna take my pick anyway. Several, actually. Futurama (which seems like a real possibility, given the stature of recent licenses, and the return of the show), Arrested Development (same reasons), Curb Your Enthusiasm (will never and should never happen without LD), and an honorable mention for Fear and Loathing because why the hell not (good luck wrestling the IP rights from HST's estate!)
Now I'm sure that this forum gets at least one "HEY TELLTALE, YOU SHOULD MAKE THIS INTO A GAME" thread a day. Well, I figure that if I'm going to introduce myself that I may as well do it not only with enthusiasm but with an idea that I believe shows promise. For those of you who're unaware of the show in question, The Sarah Connor Chronicles was a spin-off from the Terminator series of films that ran on Fox from January 13, 2008 to April 10, 2009. It revolved around the lives of the fictional characters Sarah and John Connor, following the events of Terminator 2: Judgment Day and disregarded Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines and Terminator Salvation from canon completely in favor of a show that was more oriented toward drama and character building than action, similar to the original two James Cameron films.
Unfortunately the budget of the show began to expand beyond Fox's comfort zone and the show was canceled after only two seasons (31 episodes). Not just canceled, but ended on perhaps one of the biggest cliffhangers imaginable. Now, with that in mind, how many of you here think that with the recent success of The Walking Dead that Telltale would be able to pull off an interactive Season 3 of this show?
:spoil-o:
The cliffhanger I mentioned before found young John Connor traveling into the future and finding out that because of his absence from his present, he never lead the Resistance. The conceptual third season I picture here would have the consequences of this being the focus on the first episode, with other episodes revolving around Sarah's coping with John's disappearance and, well, the usual. It's difficult to explain without going in for pages and pages and offering to link people to wikipedia articles and clips, so I'm just going to leave these bare bones here and see what the community thinks of this idea. Who knows, if it gets enough support, maybe Telltale will look into making it happen. Stranger things have happened!
It's a nice idea, though I'm unsure how a video game would work. Would it be a straight point-and-click style? An action game? A horror type thing? It'd be hard to pitch it really.
It's a nice idea, though I'm unsure how a video game would work. Would it be a straight point-and-click style? An action game? A horror type thing? It'd be hard to pitch it really.
Not really. The thing about TSCC was that it wasn't like the movies. It didn't have constant action scenes but was more about fleshing out plot, character interaction, etc. The kind of mechanics that they've got going in The Walking Dead right now would be absolutely perfect because it's got the morality choices, is heavy on dialogue and emotion but is also quite good at using quicktime events to do action sequences.
Fair enough. I haven't really played The Walking Dead due to lack of interest in the setting, but I'll take your world for it.
I haven't played it personally either but more due to lack of money than interest in the setting. What you might wanna do is head over to YouTube and watch some Let's Plays of it and then look for clips or full episode rips of TSCC. It should give you a pretty good idea of how it can work.
A choice based role-playing game (similar to how they are doing The Walking Dead), set in the world of Pirates of the Caribbean. No inclusion of Jack Sparrow and what not, but rather a separate story in which we are driven on our own ragtag adventures throughout the Caribbean. I think it is a setting that would be very interesting to see a developed choice-based storyline work in.
A choice based role-playing game (similar to how they are doing The Walking Dead), set in the world of Pirates of the Caribbean. No inclusion of Jack Sparrow and what not, but rather a separate story in which we are driven on our own ragtag adventures throughout the Caribbean. I think it is a setting that would be very interesting to see a developed choice-based storyline work in.
Damn it, thanks for reminding me of the cancelled Pirates of the Caribbean: Armada of the Damned
A choice based role-playing game (similar to how they are doing The Walking Dead), set in the world of Pirates of the Caribbean. No inclusion of Jack Sparrow and what not, but rather a separate story in which we are driven on our own ragtag adventures throughout the Caribbean. I think it is a setting that would be very interesting to see a developed choice-based storyline work in.
I think some guy named "bobber something” already came up with that.
Comments
Game of Thrones ? No .
Supernatural ? No .
The Addams Family ? Yes . :cool:
With seven kingdoms there might as well be seven seasons, each one from one of the kingdoms.
The chance to play as Sam and Dean? Awesome.
I don't know how they'd do it, but they should at least give it a try.
No, I’m not referring to the TV show, nor am I referring to the Guy Ritchie movies or the Adventure Company game series. Something original, for a change!
I prefer this one :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherlock_Holmes_%281984_TV_series%29
(Of course there's no accounting for tastes, but I loved the new Sherlock series.)
Those guys would be perfect for a humorous adventure game... I just wonder how they should make a game with them without the puzzles turning all nonsensical (which admittedly would add an interesting touch).
And now that we're on the subject of cartoon characters, how about a Tiny Toons adventure game?
Ugh. The Jeremy Brett series was badly cast, badly acted, badly scripted, and badly directed. And that's just the *good* episodes.
In my opinion. In fact, Sherlock Holmes fans seem to be split 50/50 on whether ITV did a good job of it or not. Whereas "Sherlock" is, at worst, the most recent in a loooooong line of people taking an axe to the original stories. (There are probably still people running letter-writing campaigns against Eille Norwood).
.Day of the tentacle (maniac mansion)
.Full Throttle
.The Dig
and another point and click Indiana Jones game maybe
pretty much anything Lucasarts made.
Also, it wouldn't be a bad idea to buy up the Space Quest series by sierra if possible.
I know a lot of people would love to see that.
Arrested Development: The Adventure Game
Biker Mice From Mars: The Adventure Game
Curb Your Enthusiasm: The Adventure Game
Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas: The Adventure Game
Futurama: The Adventure Game
Mr. Show: The Adventure Game
Peanut Butter Bandit: The Adventure Game
Seinfeld: The Adventure Game
South Park: The Adventure Game
Star Wars: The Adventure Game
Street Sharks: The Adventure Game
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Adventure Game
Terminator: The Adventure Game
The Beverly Hillbillies: The Adventure Game
The Red Green Show: The Adventure Game
The Simpsons: The Aventure Game
The Three Stooges: The Adventure Game
Take your pick, Telltale. Oh, and if you want to adapt Peanut Butter Bandit to an adventure game, just give me a ring.
I would like something with a 25th Anniversary too...
It could certainly allow for a nice replacement to Monkey Island as a comedic adventure series, but with a more . . . heroic hero than good ole Guybrush, which allows a completely different sort of humor and character than Monkey Island. I don't think they should be strict retellings of his adventures, but as they have done with established series -- new adventures in the mold of the old ones.
Arsene Lupin: the Game.
Much less over-the-top, Lupin's very fit to an adventure game setting -- something just barely touched upon by Frogware's Sherlock Holmes games.
Something involving conspiracies: the Game.
I don't know. Majestic-12, Mothman, aliens, stuff like that. That'd be interesting, especially if done as a homage to '50s sci fi shows like the Outer Limits. But that's already sorta been touched upon with S&M: The Devil's Playhouse.
Spy fiction thing: the Game.
Who else imagines Telltale making an adventure game where you have to escape a death trap laid by a Bond-esque villain using only stuff in the room and your inventory? I can!
The Goonies: the Game
SLOTH. LOVE. CHUNK!
The Spirit: the Game
The episodic nature would be perfect for this highly influential comic book hero.
The Mercury Men: the Game
If you don't know what the Mercury Men is, it's a really, really neat sci-fi show on the internet, split into 10 different episodes, each of about 7 or 8 minutes in length. Look it up if you like Indiana Jones and Star Wars, as they are both huge inspirations on the series.
Also, seconded on the Star Trek adventure game, for sure!
The very idea that it would make a good adventure game, when the series isn't about adventure or exploring or anything like that, just doesn't compute for me.
EDIT: The only way that it could work is if you controlled a character outside the confines of the original story (a la Lord of the Rings: The Third Age). Katniss herself has too much emotional stuff going on, and I would think that an "adventure" is the very last thing she would call her experiences in the books.
I'm not Telltale, but I'm gonna take my pick anyway. Several, actually. Futurama (which seems like a real possibility, given the stature of recent licenses, and the return of the show), Arrested Development (same reasons), Curb Your Enthusiasm (will never and should never happen without LD), and an honorable mention for Fear and Loathing because why the hell not (good luck wrestling the IP rights from HST's estate!)
Unfortunately the budget of the show began to expand beyond Fox's comfort zone and the show was canceled after only two seasons (31 episodes). Not just canceled, but ended on perhaps one of the biggest cliffhangers imaginable. Now, with that in mind, how many of you here think that with the recent success of The Walking Dead that Telltale would be able to pull off an interactive Season 3 of this show?
:spoil-o:
The cliffhanger I mentioned before found young John Connor traveling into the future and finding out that because of his absence from his present, he never lead the Resistance. The conceptual third season I picture here would have the consequences of this being the focus on the first episode, with other episodes revolving around Sarah's coping with John's disappearance and, well, the usual. It's difficult to explain without going in for pages and pages and offering to link people to wikipedia articles and clips, so I'm just going to leave these bare bones here and see what the community thinks of this idea. Who knows, if it gets enough support, maybe Telltale will look into making it happen. Stranger things have happened!
It's a nice idea, though I'm unsure how a video game would work. Would it be a straight point-and-click style? An action game? A horror type thing? It'd be hard to pitch it really.
Not really. The thing about TSCC was that it wasn't like the movies. It didn't have constant action scenes but was more about fleshing out plot, character interaction, etc. The kind of mechanics that they've got going in The Walking Dead right now would be absolutely perfect because it's got the morality choices, is heavy on dialogue and emotion but is also quite good at using quicktime events to do action sequences.
I haven't played it personally either but more due to lack of money than interest in the setting. What you might wanna do is head over to YouTube and watch some Let's Plays of it and then look for clips or full episode rips of TSCC. It should give you a pretty good idea of how it can work.
The Killing
The Wire
The Life and Times of Tim
Bored To Death
Damn it, thanks for reminding me of the cancelled Pirates of the Caribbean: Armada of the Damned
I think some guy named "bobber something” already came up with that.
Yes!
The Red Green Show: The Adventure Game
Get to it, Telltale. It would be great!