But even then, the company isn't going to just take your ideas.
If you want your ideas to have any weight, then first you're going to need popular support: thousands, if not millions who back your idea and show interest in it and it alone. You can't just present a detailed game idea to a company and expect them to run with it and wait for the beautiful, impassioned game, especially if you don't work there and have no experience in game design. What, was I going to sit back and relax and go to school and play video games while hundreds of people slaved to make my video game? That's not how things work. I was just a kid, maybe 14 years old at the time. If it were actually made by someone at Sonic Team, it probably would have made for a decent basic game bible to guide more in-depth development.īut I didn't work at Sega.
#Dragonball z raging blast 3 series#
I went into it thinking that the franchise would be better off if it went on a "nostalgic roadtrip" for a while and deliberately made it like a 3D Genesis game, ironically much like what the series wound up doing. They were very detailed ideas, going into depth about what particular stages were like, the hazards, the badniks/robots, etc. When I was a kid and into Sonic the Hedgehog, I wanted to send ideas to Sonic Team that could be turned into video games. Particularly with the continued (never-ending!) Xenoverse 2 support and the release of FighterZ, I have to imagine that at some point along the way he felt like he shared as much as he felt was worth sharing and conceptualizing in the face of what was actually in development at Bandai Namco. It was never an actual "project" in that it was never a real game or development plan or anything like that.
He's just a regular fan as much as anyone else.