Why does James Pond II: Codename Robocod have a release on so many different consoles, including modern ones?

PSPMan3000

New Challenger
Level 0
8%
Joined
Feb 24, 2025
Messages
2
Level up in
22 posts
Reaction score
2
Points
52
I swear every time I turn around I find out this thing has another release I wasn't aware of. As far as I know it's most recent release is on Switch, but just today I found out it was on PS1, and that release got made into a PS One Classic for PSN, so it also made it it's way onto PSP, PS3 and Vita. This is in addition to all it's original retro gaming PC releases (like the Atari ST, Amiga, Comodore 64, etc.) and all the retro consoles like Game Boy, GBA, SNES, Game Gear, etc.

I have to ask... why? The game looks cool for one of the really old titles (it's from before I was born) but I don't really see it in the cultural conversation the same way you see games like DOOM or even Zool. Are the rights to it really cheap or something? Also, which version should I play? I've heard the newer ports lose a brand deal that causes a bunch of content to be cut out.
 
i don't know the answer to your question but i can tell you that Aquatic Games (1992) is pretty good fun (if you have a joystick to play it with)
 
it is a mystery.png

I only ever played the Amiga version and I can say it's a good game but certainly not in the 'don't call yourself a gamer if you've never heard of it' category. Some quick Googling revealed that the modern releases might be missing some levels so you're probably better off sticking to the older ports.
 
It's EVERYWHERE, man. I wouldn't be surprised if you're able to play it on a smart fridge.
 
I think the rights to it filtered down to some shitty IP holding company who are trying to milk it for everything it's worth. I've seen several other C64/Amiga games being ported to absolutely everything and it seems like it's usually British devs, so I'm guessing it's whoever bought US Gold/Ocean/Mastertronic/some other consolidated publisher making low-effort "emulator and ROM in a wrapper" releases like the people who bought Bubsy. Since WinUAE/VICE/many other emulators are open source there are ports of them for everything, and getting it running on a new platform takes virtually no work on their part, so even if they only sell 20-30 copies throughout the release's lifetime they still make a profit. The James Pond series had a fairly warm reception in the UK, so I'm willing to bet they make at least a few thousand from every new release.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Connect with us

Support this Site

RGT relies on you to stay afloat. Help covering the site costs and get some pretty Level 7 perks too.

Latest Threads

Kyuuyaku Megami Tensei - SNES

I recently looked into the Megami Tensei series and I'm a huge fan of the world. I wanted to...
Read more

When's zelda 2 part 2

Link was like, doin cool spell and sword stuff in that game. He could level up and fly and...
Read more

I dunno...

My stepfather just said he wanted to get me a mini pc. He has one of his own and he has emulated...
Read more

The TRUE reason why 2D games remain superior

Playing 2D games engage the brain similarly to reading a book ! Both rely on filling in...
Read more

Games where you can play with a nun using guns?

So recently I've got this thing on nuns (or maids) using guns, any recommendations? Mostly RPGs...
Read more

another heatwave in Europe

Today was another hot day here in Germany and very unpleasant.
Of course it is nice to sunbathe...
Read more

Favorite Cat Breed ?

To all of you esteemed Cat lovers out there in this vast realm.I bring you this question of...
Read more

Why does James Pond II: Codename Robocod have a release on so many different consoles, including modern ones?

I swear every time I turn around I find out this thing has another release I wasn't aware of. As...
Read more

Online statistics

Members online
175
Guests online
170
Total visitors
345

Forum statistics

Threads
9,762
Messages
241,564
Members
770,949
Latest member
romdownloader1337

Advertisers

Back
Top