The actual definitions are that a remaster uses the same engine and code as the original, while a remake uses none of the original code. It can have all of the same assets as the original and still be a remake if they rebuild the codebase from the ground up. Likewise, every asset in the game could be updated and it could still be a remaster if it's codebase is forked from the original.
Comments 3
Re: Talking Point: 'Remake' Vs. 'Remaster' - What's Your Definition?
The actual definitions are that a remaster uses the same engine and code as the original, while a remake uses none of the original code. It can have all of the same assets as the original and still be a remake if they rebuild the codebase from the ground up. Likewise, every asset in the game could be updated and it could still be a remaster if it's codebase is forked from the original.
Re: Random: The World's First 'NFT Console' Has A Very Familiar-Looking Logo
I’d rather buy WinRAR
Re: Random: Did The Sims Copy Animal Crossing: New Horizons' Froggy Chair?
@KayFiOS “Sonic! I found this, like, used copy of Sims 4!”