![]() ![]() What is surprising is just how much they've copied it in Boku to Wanko. It's not really surprising, then, that Chronus latch onto Neko Atsume bandwagon. There's seemingly little that can be done to stem the tide of fly-by-night opportunists looking to cash in on the hot mobile trends with lazy reskins of existing game concepts: Apple and Google generally seem reluctant to remove anything that isn't blatant copyright infringement of an existing property. I saw at least one knockoff of mega-popular mobile game Monster Strike on there, and another game that looks like it's piggybacking hard off of the popularity of Love Live: School Idol Project, a game where you gather and train a gaggle of anime schoolgirls to be idols.Īpp cloning is a serious problem for mobile developers. with a bare-bones website and games that all seem very similar to other popular things. Boku to Wanko is made by a different company entirely: a firm called Chronus Inc. They also develop many mobile JRPGs for publisher Kemco. It made numerous other titles, of which Neko Atsume is their most visible. Neko Atsume was developed by Nagoya, Japan-based mobile game studio Hit-Point. A canine version of Neko Atsume seems like it'd be the logical next step, right? That's where the dog-gathering followup, Boku to Wanko (Dogs and Me) comes in.Įxcept, despite what some rumors and reports might lead you to believe, it's not a followup at all. Of course, maybe the appeal of collecting cats isn't really your thing. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |