// THE VERGE — HARDWARE & GADGET
Indie developers got tired of waiting for a new Star Fox, so they’re making their own
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Despite the new remake, smaller studios are barrel-rolling their way into plugging the gap left by Nintendo.
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Nostalgia remains a powerful force. So much so that, in exploring the echoes of a late-’90s childhood spent skimming the water of Corneria and sneering “cocky little freaks!” in time with a monkey encased in a Gundam suit, I’m simultaneously describing playing Star Fox 64 (Lylat Wars if you’re nasty) in 1997 and streaming it through Nintendo Switch Online today.
The franchise has been revived through a splashy remake on the Switch 2, but it’s also a series that has not seen an all-new entry since Star Fox Zero on the Wii U. Yet Nintendo’s neglect of the series has been gently offset by indie creators. Ex-Zodiac and Whisker Squadron: Survivor recently offered echoes of Star Fox, and now two upcoming games, Huskrafts’ Rogue Eclipse and Wild Blue Skies from Chuhai Labs — founded by former Star Fox programmer Giles Goddard — offer hope that this desolate genre might be resurrected.
Though perhaps it’s unfair to describe Star Fox’s absence in terms of abandonment. “It’s just that times have moved on,” Goddard tells The Verge. “Each iteration were great games for their time,” but now, he suggests, their enduring popularity may be because you don’t see them much. “I think people are starved of originality more than any particular style or genre of game.”
For indie developers who hope to forestall the obscurity of games reminiscent of Star Fox, that translates to dealing with risk-averse publishers. “When I was pitching Rogue Eclipse, the response I generally received from most labels was that the genre is dead,” says Huskrafts’ Husban “Mcdoogleh” Siddiqi. It echoes the experiences of others, including Flippfly creative director Aaron San Filippo, who says many publishers “told us they just couldn’t see a big enough market to justify our budget for Whisker Squadron: Survivor.”
Unable to persuade publishers to take the leap, developers like Flippfly turn to crowdfunding as a means to resuscitate Star Fox. This follows crowdfunding success stories like Hollow Knight, Pillars of Eternity, Shovel Knight, and Undertale, which similarly revived underserved genres.