Interplay seems to be on a roll when it comes to hiring people ever since the lawsuit started, and now they're looking for a producer, with the usual "Previous MMORPG experience" and "Familiarity with the post-apocalyptic genre".
Brother None said:"Familiarity with the post-apocalyptic genre".
Deadman87 said:"Must have seen Mad Max"?
Ravager69 said:Deadman87 said:"Must have seen Mad Max"?
More likely "Must have seen 28 Days Later" or "Must played WoW and FO3".
I seriously doubt Mad Max will be as much of an influence on modern post-apo games as it had on Fallout.
Morbus said:I read the road in the summer, because everyone kept talking about it. I'm not much of a reader, because I can't spend much time risking reading a book I don't know is great. Because reading takes so much time in comparison with other media. But I went and bought myself The Road, UK edition or something. It is depressing, yes, but I don't think it's anything brilliant, and that kind of takes away from the emotion. It's like any melodrama based on Romeo and Juliet. It's depressing, but it's all "been there, done that". The Road is a bit like that. Not entirely, just a bit. But it was a good read, all in all. I think.
Jesse Heinig said:There's a lot to see and read, really, from A Boy and His Dog to The Road (crushingly depressing, really) and even crazy things like Cherry 2000. The post-apocalyptic genre seems to be experiencing some kind of resurgence. Its roots were pretty clear in the '80s -- we were reeling from the Cold War with the spectre of mutual annihilation overhead the whole time. Now we're looking more toward environment collapse, but for some reason the spirit of postapocalyptica seems to be catching the imagination again. Looks like it's one of those things that comes once per decade . . .
Ravager69 said:Jesse Heinig said:There's a lot to see and read, really, from A Boy and His Dog to The Road (crushingly depressing, really) and even crazy things like Cherry 2000. The post-apocalyptic genre seems to be experiencing some kind of resurgence. Its roots were pretty clear in the '80s -- we were reeling from the Cold War with the spectre of mutual annihilation overhead the whole time. Now we're looking more toward environment collapse, but for some reason the spirit of postapocalyptica seems to be catching the imagination again. Looks like it's one of those things that comes once per decade . . .
Yes, I agree, but you misunderstood. I'm saying that nowadays postapocalyptic setting is quite diffrent that it was. It's often demons\zombies apocalypse with uber weapons and mutants. The classics of the genre aren't *that much* of an influence nowadays, it's rather copying Fallout\Bioshock.
How could you get that out of what I said?! Seriously!terebikun said:The Road is like Romeo and Juliet...how?
terebikun said:The Road is like Romeo and Juliet...how?