Why Does the Shadow of the Colossus Remake Matter?

The Shadow of the Colossus remake is approaching us. Like a comet or the planet of note in Lars von Trier’s Melancholia, it is drifting toward us at a slow-but-steady pace on a collision course with the thinkpiece machine of the videogame world. This remake, allegorically an annihilating heavenly body, the Dark Star of discourse, is going to smash into our fan culture. The panic has already set in. We’re looking up in the sky, and it’s there, and we’re worried about it. The original version of Shadow of the Colossus is a game that many people have a profound attachment to. Originally released in 2005, it is a somber experience that puts you in the shoes of a young man who is destroying everything beautiful in the world, on accident, maybe. You’re compelled to feel sad, and it’s a gritty, strange visual world. Throttled by the PlayStation 2’s capabilities as a platform, Shadow of the Colossus is something unique and odd in the world.
And it seems that many people think that this remake, this repetition, will obliterate that first game. Is it a recreation? Is it a take on the same ideas? Will it be the appropriate resurrection of the feelings that you had in 2005? (Or will it allow you to finally feel the feelings that people claim to experienced in 2005?) Like a comet, the crashing orb of space rock, this thing that is appearing over the horizon is deeply anxiety inducing.
I myself don’t feel any anxiety about it. To my mind, the Shadow of the Colossus is never going to be able to replace the previous game. Worse, the previous game itself can’t replace itself in your mind. The legend of Shadow is so massive, the supposed profound feelings that it captured and evoked are so extreme, that it vastly exceeds any given game experience. For lots of people, it was the game that delivered the first inkling that games could deliver something greater than our lowest expectations of them. It forced people to think about themselves and how a designed world could be so efficiently geared toward making you feel bad.