▲
1
▼
In a 2001 interview with the game's director Jun Kobayashi featured at the game music column of allabout.co.jp, he was asked who his target audience for the game was. He responded:
"At first, I was thinking of a game for people who liked club music, something they could enjoy without actually going to the club."
"However, after mulling it over, we finally decided on targeting people who are new to video games with Rez. I mean people who maybe bought a Playstation 2 and watch DVDs on it, but hardly play any games. Or people who think “games today are too difficult, I can’t play them.”"
"By the way, I’ve been playing games since the Famicom era, so for most games today I don’t need to read the instruction manual, I can just start playing. That’s all good for people like me who grew up with and experienced the evolution of Famicom, Super Famicom, Sega Saturn, and PlayStation… but Rez was aimed at those who don’t have that experience, the kind of people who have just bought a PS2 for the first time. The PS2 may be their first experience with a video game controller, and I wanted to create a game that even those new users could enjoy."
"With Famicom games you have a directional pad that moves a character, and when you press a button your character immediately jumps or attacks. I’m very familiar with those kinds of controls. Most games today are released for people like me, who are familiar with those kinds of controls, and developers then try to take that formula further and do more refined things with it."
"Consequently, people whose first video game console is the PS2 see these more complex games and have no idea what’s going on. The buttons are too complicated and the appeal of the game is lost on them. Of course with a player like me, I prefer those kinds of games, but with Rez I wanted to immerse new players in a different world: one where a brand new sensation has been added to the traditional formula of “aim and shoot the enemy”-type games. "
Related Games
Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games
Ryuu ga Gotoku Kenzan!
New Trivia!
Persona 4 Revival
Sonic the Hedgehog Chaos
Sonic Frontiers
Super Monkey Ball Adventure
Etrian Odyssey 2 Untold: The Fafnir Knight
Super Monkey Ball
Virtua Tennis 3
Sonic Rush
Virtua Cop
Shining Force
Sonic Adventure
Sonic the Hedgehog
Sonic the Hedgehog 4: Episode I
Kid Chameleon
Jet Grind Radio
Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020
Valkyria Chronicles
Sonic R
Alien Front Online
Fist of the North Star: Lost Paradise
Disney's Aladdin
ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth
Space Channel 5: Part 2
Sonic CD
Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium
Pulseman
Final Fight CD
Alien Soldier
ChuChu Rocket!
Sonic Advance 2
Phantasy Star II
Sonic the Hedgehog: Triple Trouble
Sonic Heroes
Super Monkey Ball: Banana Mania
Puyo Puyo
Football Manager 2013
Ecco: The Tides of Time
Phantasy Star Universe
Popful Mail: Magical Fantasy Adventure
Shinobi
Depthcharge
Sonic Jam
Persona 4 Golden
Sonic Generations
Sonic DS
Billy Hatcher and the Giant Egg
Fighters Megamix
Ghouls 'n Ghosts