Remember booting up PaRappa the Rapper for the first time? That weird, paper-thin dog rapping about learning kung fu probably shouldn't have worked. But it did, and it's exactly the kind of wonderfully bizarre PlayStation gem that might be making a comeback.
According to Video Games Chronicle's Andy Robinson, Sony's digging deep into their vault of forgotten franchises. "I know of at least a couple that they're working on. Like the deep cut, old IP stuff," Robinson revealed on VGC's latest podcast. While he's keeping tight-lipped about specifics, this lines up perfectly with what PlayStation Studios head Hermen Hulst told Famitsu recently about Sony's IP strategy.
"The numerous IPs that we hold are an important asset for PlayStation," Hulst explained, laying out their two-pronged approach: "We are not only developing new franchises, but we are also continually looking at opportunities to leverage our legacy IP."
But here's where it gets interesting. We're not talking about the obvious choices here – this isn't another article about Jak and Daxter or Sly Cooper (though don't get me wrong, I'd love to see Daxter's wisecracks in 4K). Instead, Robinson's hints point toward Sony's deeper cuts. Think MediEvil's skeletal shenanigans, LocoRoco's blob-rolling charm, or even the rhythm-action madness of Vib-Ribbon.
The best part? These smaller revivals actually make a lot of sense for Sony right now. While massive AAA projects like Marvel's Spider-Man 2 anchor their lineup, these quirky classics could fill that sweet spot between indie and blockbuster – exactly where some of PlayStation's most creative games have always lived.
For those who never experienced these original gems, imagine games that weren't afraid to be weird. PaRappa had you freestyle rapping with a karate-teaching onion. LocoRoco let you tilt entire worlds to roll singing blobs around. They're the kind of games that could only exist because someone at PlayStation looked at a pitch and said, "Yeah, that's crazy enough to work."
Now imagine those same wild ideas unleashed on modern hardware. With every PlayStation 5 flexing the power of a small supercomputer, there's never been a better time to bring back gaming's weirdest experiments. While we wait for Sony to spill the beans, I'll be here imagining what other bizarre brilliance they might be cooking up in those PlayStation Studios labs.