• deadcream
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      9 hours ago

      One has absolutely no connection with another. It’s been 13 years since BioWare last used Origins’ engine. Few people in software development stay in one company for that long (especially programmers who would feel no personal connection to company’s IP, unlike writers or artists).

  • deegeese
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    9 hours ago

    So they can’t get 3 of them to spend a week to write a primer for new devs?

    • deadcream
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      9 hours ago

      They are probably an experienced team members that are needed on ME5, and management decided that they can’t distract them. And these new devs would spend a lot of time figuring out a completely unfamiliar codebase (also creating a proper remaster would also necessitate a lot of low-level changes to the engine which will make it much harder). So it’s a business decision, not technical one.

      • deegeese
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        9 hours ago

        Exactly, it’s “won’t” not “can’t”.

        Even with zero legacy staff they could assign people to learn/document the old engine if there was enough potential revenue.

    • blindsight@beehaw.org
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      9 hours ago

      Dragon Age: Origins came out 15 years ago. That’s a very long time to stay with the same company in the tech sector. It’s not at all unusual that there are so few people left who worked with the engine for the first game.