Oh never played it, though I always wanted to. Is it as good as they say? (Mostly 8-9 out of 10 over the interwebz iirc)
Wind Waker is no doubt a work of art. I recently wanted to play through the Resident Evil series again before 5 came out so I busted out my ols PS1 RE games and played them with EPSXE. I used the one cel-shading plugin for it and it actually looked amazing! Think of how the comic styled art in the RE2 manual looked and thats about what the game looked like. Definately worth a look if your a RE fan and for that matter a cel-shading fan. RE2 just doesnt look right to me any other way now :icon_bigg
:thumbsup: Hmm, JSRF, Fear Effect, Tales of Symphonia, Killer 7, etc. Can't really think of any bad ones, at least ones that look bad, aside from maybe some forgettable PS2 ones? I thought Wind Waker was great looking, but that shadow under links chin made him look really weird to me.
Actually, the Family Guy game for Xbox/PS2 looked really good, almost on par with an episode of the show. Too bad the game pretty much sucked.:lol:
Dragon Quest 8 for me. The cell shading style lends itself quite well. It really made the characters much more lively than any of the previous games.
Only one has mentioned No more Hero's... oh dear... Theres not that many games with Cel-Shading.. Personally The quake mod for Dreamcast that never got finished is probably the best. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2GhP50ZoxKU har har har The use of 'FULLY' is amazing in that sentence.
It did look pretty cool, and was really, really fun in that special way that very bad games can be. It was the audio that made the game, though - the music and the voices were pretty neat. I had a lot of fun with that game.
No More Heroes is pretty nice looking, but it's hard to see how nice it looks when the Wii nasties itself up on my HDTV. =( I think I like Killer 7's weird art direction more though.
No Okami love? Even on my hdtv*PS2 version* it looks good other than that for me Killer 7, Naruto: Rise of a ninja, Naruto: The Broken Bond and DQ VIII