![]() ![]() The most extreme example I can think of is Batman Returns which had completely different versions for Master System, Megadrive, Amiga, Snes, Nes and Lynx, that’s six different games from one license!. But back in the early nineties this wasn’t the case, developers would get a license to make a game for a specific format. ![]() ![]() These days developers bid against each other for the big names films, so end up spending a huge sum of money to attain the sole rights, leaving themselves with a tiny budget to actually make the game. There have only ever been brief moments in gaming history when the words ‘Movie License’ didn’t make a game instantly dismissible as complete rubbish.
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