How does one create a cartoon character for a video game which will be able to stand the test of time? Well, there is no definite formula really. If there is, then how can one describe the similarities between Super Mario and Sonic the Hedgehog as they become the respective mascots of the game companies Nintendo and SEGA?
What it all boils down to is a set of factors which work in the favor of a video game cartoon character in order to stand out among the competition. To understand this further, let's move away from anthropomorphic cartoon mascots to a real person rendered into the video game world: Lara Croft of the storied Tomb Raider franchise.
For the uninitiated, Tomb Raider is an action-adventure video game series which normally centers on the search for a very powerful artifact by the female treasure hunter Lara Croft as she is pursued by many shady organizations out to get her. The first game of the entire franchise was released in 1996 and was very instrumental in the success of the first Sony PlayStation video game console. In 2006, the Guinness Book of World Records gave the distinction to Lara as the "Most Successful Human Videogame Heroine" in 2006.
Where did this success come from? Conceptualized by Toby Gard, Lara Croft has not only been recognized as a female counterpart art of Indiana Jones but also as a symbol for feminism and even as a sexual fantasy. This image was a direct consequence of the character design of Lara - adventurous, fiery, self-reliant and packaged in the physical attributes of free-flowing hair, softer face features and enlarged (and eventually reduced) breast size, brown shorts, a blue-green sleeveless top, holsters by the hips and a small backpack.
Lara's Tomb Raider video game series further solidified its stake in the popular culture by venturing into the silver screen where Croft was personified by the top celebrity in the recent Forbes list Angelina Jolie. Lara Croft stuck in the minds of many people thanks to the sizzling appeal of Angelina Jolie in two films Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001) and Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (2003)
In the first film, the life of Lara Croft is first brought into the fore as an adventurous daughter of a rich British aristocratic family. At this time, the planets of the solar system were said to be in line for an astronomical conjunction. This planetary alignment is said to be critical in the search for the All-seeing Eye which will give its possessors with control of time through the Triangle of Light. As it turns out, the All-seeing Eye is in the Croft mansion.
Source : ezinearticles
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