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Opinion: It’s Time for More Katamari

This article is over 6 years old and may contain outdated information

Oh! I feel it.Ā I feel the cosmos.Ā Katamari Damacy, the beloved surrealist action game about a very tiny star prince rolling all of physical existence into a ball, is coming back.Ā Katamari Damacy Reroll, an HD remaster of the original gussied up with motion controls, arrives in December on Nintendo Switch.

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For a series as ingrained in the gaming world’s consciousness,Ā RerollĀ is a remarkable announcement. For 14 years Keita Takahashi’s original Katamari Damacy has been stuck on PlayStation 2 and as a downloadable on PlayStation 3.Ā RerollĀ will also be the first console release of anyĀ KatamariĀ in almost a decade. The last home release wasĀ Katamari Forever, a divisive greatest hits collection exclusively on PS3 that came out in 2009. Since then, the onlyĀ Katamari-flavored titles to come out have been mediocre mobile and handheld spinoffs likeĀ Amazing Katamari DamacyĀ andĀ Touch My Katamari. (Editor’s note: Yes, really.)

As time has gone on, though, more and more creators inspired byĀ Katamari DamacyĀ have made their own games to fill the void. Ben Esposito’sĀ Donut County‘s minimalist art style, strange sense of humor, and playful experimental electronic music are directly inspired byĀ Katamari. EvenĀ Donut CountyĀ doesn’t directly replicate the action, though. WhileĀ Katamari‘s aesthetics and vibe have survived over the years, nothing else has ever captured its particular blend of strange warmth and funny challenge. Nothing else isĀ Katamari Damacy, even its own sequels.

This is why a remaster of the original is so exciting. While Bandai Namco’s kept the series alive in one form or another over the years, it’s also never created a game with the same creative vibrancy of the first. The escalating challenges, the music and style made Katamari Damacy one of the rare games that was perfect the first time out. Even its creator recognized thatĀ Katamari DamacyĀ didn’t need a sequel. “[It] came to a point where the company was willing to release a sequel without me,” Takahashi toldĀ MTVĀ in 2005.

imageHe only agreed to work on the sequelĀ We Love KatamariĀ when he found out Namco was going to move ahead on a follow up that was just a Christmas-themed version of the first game. Eventually Keita Takahashi did quit Namco because he was exhausted by the lack of creative opportunities. “I can’t deny the fact that people work on sequels,” Takahashi said in an interview withĀ EurogamerĀ in 2010. “After all, it’s a business. But at the same time, in the past decade or so, I’ve only seen most companies working on the safe side making more sequels. I haven’t seen anyone trying to make something really new out of the profit they made from those sequels.”

Born for mercenary reasons, those sequels are actually pretty good games.Ā We Love KatamariĀ in particular is admirable for its willingness to directly address why there’s a sequel at all. Taking a page out of theĀ Gremlins 2school of sequelization,Ā LoveĀ goes metatextual. The King of All Cosmos, the David Bowie-meets-Wario deity in the series who routinely destroys all the stars in the universe and then forces his son to make new ones with his Katamari ball, is shocked by the success of the prince’s first outing and sends the rest of his children to make more stars for all the fans.Ā Me and My KatamariĀ added its own novelty by going portable andĀ Beautiful KatamariĀ added a high-definition sheen to the series’ signature lo-fi art on Xbox 360.

All of these sequels, whether or not they benefited from Takahashi’s involvement, lacked the freshness and lucidity of the original. The King of All Cosmos and his son are not characters longing for development. The original game ended with all of earth rolled up into their lives. Once you’ve made stars out of not just rolled up balls of various crabs but gods literally plucked from the sky, there’s nothing left to do but repeat yourself. In improv comedy, leaning towards the absurd and non-sequitur is part of the formula. Although that formula is baked into the soul ofĀ Katamari, the series would do well to follow the common improv rule: never escalate the bit into outer space. The idea is that once you’ve gone as big and outsized as you can, there’s no room left to grow. Part ofĀ Katamari Damacy‘s perfect formula is that it went as big as possible right from the start. Rather than crumble under the weight, it soared.


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Anthony John Agnello
Anthony John Agnello has worked full-time as a journalist and critic for over a decade with outlets like The A.V. Club, Edge Magazine, Joystiq, Engadget, and many, many others. Anthony first contributed to The Escapist in 2009, with In Defense of the Friend Code, an article about how we don't know where we're going if we don't know where we come from. How even what seems like the stupidest creation in the world comes from a human place; it's the work of one person reaching out to another.