Part of the problem there was that they never established that OoT was giving us 1985 A and 1985 B.
I will say that Zelda absolutely does not give a solid definition of how time travel works. Ever. Forget defining how it should work for the series. Each of the several games that has time travel doesn't even maintain consistency in how it works within that game. OoT's ending splitting the timeline is apparently a unique event that's completely independent of the pre-ordained sequence of events implied through stuff like the windmill song. SS having Zelda already sealed away at the start of the game and Impa being the old woman that remembers them in the past is completely inconsistent with going back to plant a seed so it can become a tree in the present. Time travel just works however they want it to work at the moment for the story.Part of the problem there was that they never established that OoT was giving us 1985 A and 1985 B.
Yeah, that's even worse.
But just having three different timelines and never even thinking to mention that's how that works in this case...
I mean, yeah, I thought OoT was all one timeline from start to finish, and you were just hopping back and forth there.
Because the "three timelines" thing was just because the fans couldn't just... accept that most games existed on their own.
Given the more family friendly nature of the Nintendo platform (Zelda fans notwithstanding…)
Atari has quietly announced a big Toy Story retro collection coming this October. The Collection will include:
Toy Story (SNES, Gen/MD, Game Boy)
Toy Story 2 (PlayStation 1 and Game Boy Color versions)
Toy Story Racer (PS1 and GBC)
Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (PS1 and GBC)
A Bug’s Life (PS1 and GBC)
Also included will be design documents and interviews, inducting with Traveler’s Tales staff and Jim Hanks, Tom Hanks’ cheaper brother (Legit, when Tom isn’t available or too expensive, his brother Jim steps in as a vocal stand in)
In addition, Toy Story 3 is getting a remaster. TS3’s game was notable for its “Toy Box” mode, which was foundation upon which Disney Infinity would be designed from.
The physical copy will include both in a double pack, while you can order either Toy Story 3 OR the Retro Collection separately on digital.
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Toy Story: Retro Roundup! & Toy Story 3 Complete Edition
Toy Story: Retro Roundup! and Toy Story 3: Complete Edition are out now on PS5, PS4, Xbox, Nintendo Switch, and Steam. Buy the standalone games or the physical Double Pack from Atari.atari.com
Yep.Didn't Warner Bros own Atari once?
They've been doing licensed compilations for a while now, like the TMNT Cowabunga Collection and Mortal Kombat Legacy Kollection. Oh, and I think The Disney Afternoon Collection, Street Fighter 30th, and of course, the first Mega Man Legacy Collection were all them, too.What I want to know is how the heck Atari ended up with the rights to any of those. Disney has always acted as publisher for all their tie-in games, and no studio Atari currently owns was behind them. In fact, it would appear that all of the studios involved are either defunct or now owned by Warner Bros.
Digital Eclipse’s purchase and the new CEO were the two best things to happen to Atari in decades.Yep.
They've been doing licensed compilations for a while now, like the TMNT Cowabunga Collection and Mortal Kombat Legacy Kollection. Oh, and I think The Disney Afternoon Collection, Street Fighter 30th, and of course, the first Mega Man Legacy Collection were all them, too.
Well, rather, those were Digital Eclipse, which Atari purchased.