We need to work on that different game criteria.
So to ask the difficult question again: What has to change within a game's new release when compared to earlier releases for it to warrant a new game entry, instead of a new release group under the existing game entry?
First let's document what other sites are saying about this issue.
MobyGames
So to ask the difficult question again: What has to change within a game's new release when compared to earlier releases for it to warrant a new game entry, instead of a new release group under the existing game entry?
First let's document what other sites are saying about this issue.
MobyGames
VideoGameGeekDifferent game: When either game play, perspective, and/or storyline are different than the existing entry. Graphics/Sound that are merely improved are usually not a different game. This is of course evaluated on a case-by-case basis in comparison with other versions. Particular cases to be aware of are handheld versions of console or PC games which usually are different. In general, licensed titles (like those based on movies) often are different for different platforms, especially those released in the late 80s/early 90s. If you are not sure that a certain version of a game is the same as another, don't assume it is - always try to confirm it by playing it yourself or reading reviews.
In another thread we already agreed on some things which do not matter for the decision about a new game entry.One of the gray areas of VGG is to separate when a release is just another release of the same game or it is a new game. We developed a few rules to be used, but most of the times it will be individual calls. Again, if you have any doubt, post on the How to VGG forum and we will check it:
If the only difference is due to hardware limitations, it is a [release]
If the controls changed because of a platform change, it is a [release]
Slightly adjusted graphics and a few new scenes and locations, it is a [release]
If the gameplay is different, if there is a new genre, or a completely revamped title, it is a new [videogame]
In the case of Fighting games, the addition of new characters alone still makes it only a [release]. New mechanics makes for a new [videogame]
Okay, that's the status quo for now, let's start developing some different game criteria. As this will always be very subjective, I think that we won't have clear-cut criteria, but a checklist of pros/cons which we can go through to make up a decision about a release.
- Naming
It cannot matter whether a port or a re-release of a game own the same name like the original.- Time of release
It just doesn't matter if a port of a game was released 10 months after the original, or 10 years after it.- Graphics and sound
Cosmetical changes should not matter, otherwise every remake would be a new game when it is not. As always there are corner cases here, for instance when a game is re-released with a completely changed graphical set, like Super Mario Brothers 2, or this funny one which saw three different graphic sets in three different regions. But IMHO, if nothing else changes, a new graphics set doesn't qualify for a new game entry.- If it is a licensed or unofficial release of the game.