The most notable of these, Devan Baker's Project: Revive, was actually discussed with the Cartoon Network developers and rejected due to a rapidly decaying player count. Despite its cancellation, the game still has a massive cult following, with various petitions requesting it to be relaunched. Eventually, after a slew of bad reviews, this game was also phased out.įusionFall closed on August 29th of 2013. Instead of being an MMO platformer like FusionFall, it's an overhead 3D action game ala Diablo with both a single player and online multiplayer opponent that lets you choose between various Cartoon Network heroes and take them into combat. There's also a spinoff set in the same continuity as the main game called FusionFall Heroes. There's also the wiki for your browsing enjoyment.
After a long stint of no significant updates (beyond the disabling of the chat feature in June 2013), Cartoon Network Games finally announced the game's closing on August 23rd and granted all players max levels and unlimited funds until the game's final day on August 29th. Meanwhile, the team attempted to create "FusionFall Adventures," three questlines themed to specific shows that got mostly negative reception from players, mostly due to the drop in quality. New NPC's and items were shown off from newer Cartoon Network properties which were originally intended for future expansions, but only a few of them would be added into the game at a later point. In a last ditch effort, the team celebrated the "Birthday Bash" in 2010. Having only been involved primarily in the story/idea elements, CN found themselves with a large amount of un-/barely finished assets which they tried, and failed, to add onto. You can have three nanos with you at all times, and each has three abilities, of which each can only use one, granting you a variety of different layouts and choices, such as having Numbuh Two provide super speed, the ability to warp back to specific locations in dungeons, or increased money gain upon defeating enemies.Ĭartoon Network co-developed the game with a Korean company, Grigon Entertainment, who went bankrupt around the time of the game's launch. The chance to play a new-and-improved version almost sounds too good to be true!ĭecided to post the teaser here in case anyone was interested.However, the biggest change to the MMO formula came with Nanos, miniature versions of Cartoon Network characters that are gained on level-up instead of stat bonuses. Personally, I'm psyched I always thought FF looked awesome when I was a kid, but I never got to play it before it was shut down. The trailer above shows what Legacy will entail: updated character models, more cinematic story, characters and locations that weren't in the original, and even completely revamped gameplay.
Later this month, they're re-releasing the original Fusionfall to the public as Fusionfall Retro (it was supposed to release August first, but some last-minute wrinkles needed to be ironed out), and using the original's source-code, they're completely re-defining everything that made it great and creating an updated, modern version called Legacy. Cartoon Network's 2008 MMO, Fusionfall, is getting a complete, overhauled remake by a dedicated team of fans called Fusionfall Universe. So, here's something I only learned about yesterday.