Except the final cut is available on DVD. In fact, the best version of the collector's edition is still the DVD version, since it's the one with the limited edition brief case that comes with a book and a frame of the film. The Blu-ray edition is just your standard 5 disc package, like a season boxed set of a TV show except it's five different cuts of the same movie.Mr.Mattress said:Unless the "DVD" is actually a newly released Blu-Ray and you don't have a player for it...Mr.Tea said:You don't need an entirely different DVD player to watch Blade Runner: The Final Cut. And it's "only" 20-30$.j-e-f-f-e-r-s said:How is this any different to new DVDs of a director's cut? When I picked up Blade Runner: The Final Cut, I didn't see queues of people in HMV demanding that they replace their original DVD of the film with the updated one. I imagine these new changes to the game cost time and money to develop, and I don't see a problem with Eidos/Square trying to get a return on investment.
OT: I dunno, I sort of figured out that games like this don't really sell on the WiiU (Updated Ports that were on Non-Nintendo Consoles), so I don't know how successful this will be. Maybe I can pick it up, but I dunno...
As for the rest, this should be a free DLC for the other platforms. The Graphical and boss fight upgrades for the PC version, and the boss fight upgrades for the other two platforms (which presumably couldn't handle the better lighting.) Because this is exactly the kind of thing PC gamers used to get for free before Halo 2 proved console gamers would pay for it, dammit.