The music from the first game, on the other hand, I find it good in general save for a couple repetitive tracks that I can still listen to and enjoy, and, while Naganuma's tracks in that game are wonderful, they're not necessarily the best of the list, just the most consistent style because they're the most numerous ones from a single artist. If I listen to JSRF music, I only like the new tracks from Naganuma, Jacques and Guitar Vader plus a couple of the standalone tracks, but I hate or at least find utterly boring the most prominent part of the soundtrack where the Latch brothers were involved, and the remixed versions of the tracks from the first game, I may like them or not, but are usually inferior to their original version, they feel gimmicky and not necessarily more fitting with the new setting. Big stakes in these series! JSR growing through word-of-mouth from two poorly selling cult classics to something Sega thinks they can push like this is a crazy underdog story, haha.Ĭlick to expand.I partially agree with this, but only partially. They do mention it being 2-3 years away at least and could be cancelled, but I do wanna see what comes of this. And Crazy Taxi being a battle-royale of hundreds of taxis slamming into each other in competition for passengers and good travel times sounds like it could be an incredible thought. And honestly? A lot of JSR's ideas and mechanics would transition super smoothly into this format particularly the ideas of turf wars, trick competitions, races, world exploring, custom graffiti designs, and events hosted by Professor K. ESPECIALLY with the worry of them including the ever-horrid idea of NFTs into the games (something not confirmed or denied in this report, but IMO will hopefully fall out of worry as that fad continues to rapidly decline).īut I do find it really interesting to see Sega put a lot of money and time into reviving what we know as beloved but fairly niche franchises. 'Free-to-play', 'games as a service' and 'Fortnite' raise a bunch of eyebrows and jerk a lot of knees. There's been a lot of mixed responses amongst people so far, and pretty justifiably so. Both new games are in the early stages of creation and could still be canceled, the people said.Ĭlick to expand.So, free-to-play mass online revivals of Crazy Taxi and Jet Set Radio in the works. It was named alongside Jet Set Radio in Sega’s annual report a year ago on a list of intellectual property assets that Sega wanted to recapitalize by bringing them up to date. The new Crazy Taxi has already been in development for over a year and the Tokyo-based entertainment group aims to release it within two to three years, the people said, asking not to be named as the information is not yet public. Fortnite has become the role model for such games: free to play, it’s available across platforms, hosts large multiplayer contests and includes extras like vehicles, construction and social events on top of the usual combat, spurring player purchases of in-game items. The two titles would be the first entries in Sega’s Super Game initiative, which the company announced a year ago as an effort to develop recurring revenue sources and build online communities around its software portfolio. is developing big-budget reboots of its Dreamcast games Crazy Taxi and Jet Set Radio as it taps its back catalog in search of global hits like Epic Games Inc.’s Fortnite, according to people familiar with its plans.
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