![]() The N Sane Trilogy definitely looks better than even the rosiest-tinted memories of my youth, but it’s still recognizably Crash Bandicoot. I’ve said before: The sign of a great remaster or remake is whether it looks like you remember the game looking. All the advances in textures and shaders in the past 22 years, brought to bear on an embodiment of early 3D gaming. Water looks like water and fire looks like fire. ![]() ![]() ![]() Keep the designs intact, just pack them full of detail.Īnd that’s what you get with N Sane Trilogy. It’s an altogether easier job to overhaul Crash Bandicoot, I imagine, than an early “photoreal” game like Medal of Honor. Crash is colorful and iconic, as are the worlds he runs through and the creatures he fights. Limited by technology, developers instead had to rely on strong art direction to stand out. Crash Bandicoot came on the cusp of 3D gaming, early in the PlayStation 1’s lifecycle.
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