Wonder Boy: Asha In Monster World Gets A Shiny New Trailer
why it happened, but this generation has delivered a big comeback for the
Wonder Boy series, from officially sanctioned remasters to loosely linked re-imaginings. It s not quite over, with
It s a reimagining of
Monster World IV, which was Japan-only originally on SEGA Mega Drive, before getting localised on the good old Wii among other systems. One of its selling points is that it has key members of the original development team at the helm, though its overhauled visual style won t please everyone.
In any case, there s a new trailer to showcase the sort of gameplay we can expect once it arrives.
Get an Idea of What Asha Is Doing in Monster World in a New Trailer
Wonder Boy: Asha in Monster World trailer out now. It helps show how
Monster World IV changed in this Artdink remake. People can get a better look at the new character designs, see how the game plays, and get a better idea of what’s going on.
After introducing the title, we get to see Asha and Pepelogoo explore and fight their way through plenty of different environments. We see how Pepelogoo can help her hit switches, fly, reach new areas, and deal with hazards. It also reminded people that Ryuichi Nishizawa is returning as its director and will be joined again by Character Designer Maki Ozora and Sound Designer Shinichi Sakamoto. Takanori Kurihara is also back to handle Creative Management.
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For video game fans who have been playing in arcades and at home for several decades now, the topic of preservation has become a pressing one in recent years. As ageing technology inevitably fails and we sadly begin losing the creators who were there at the dawn of digital interactive entertainment, important works can all-too-easily be lost forever. Source code goes unarchived, assets disappear on degrading storage mediums, and pieces of our cultural heritage once assumed to be safe forever because digital doesn t degrade,
right? become not only unplayable, but unrecoverable.
As preservationists work to save video game history before it s too late, one such piece of software has fortunately escaped oblivion thanks to the combined efforts of passionate developers and publishers, and former Westone staff who worked on the original game. The ill-fated