I have zero knowledge of what you're talking about. I'm vaguely aware that Bungie is a software company.
In general game crossovers are a bit more difficult in a shared universe than all of the others because of
1. You have to play to experience it. This takes time, and often skill. I'm pretty terrible at FPS, might not be able to get most of the content. I got sick of waiting for summons and never bothered to play to the end of Final Fantasy VII. Books/movies/podcasts can be experienced passively.
2. Games enforce the logic of their genre pretty hard, with a few exceptions. Otherwise, you couldn't play it. Most of the time, those exceptions are minigames. Drizzt clones are the start of the thing.
3. Game characterization is weaker, most of the time. The setting elements are fine. But there's a reason why there are so many different interpretations of the Touhous.
4. Games tend to be bad at random access for fanfic reference material. Some are better than others, but the best bet involves multiple saves and/or hoping someone put the cutscene on the net.
In general game crossovers are a bit more difficult in a shared universe than all of the others because of
1. You have to play to experience it. This takes time, and often skill. I'm pretty terrible at FPS, might not be able to get most of the content. I got sick of waiting for summons and never bothered to play to the end of Final Fantasy VII. Books/movies/podcasts can be experienced passively.
2. Games enforce the logic of their genre pretty hard, with a few exceptions. Otherwise, you couldn't play it. Most of the time, those exceptions are minigames. Drizzt clones are the start of the thing.
3. Game characterization is weaker, most of the time. The setting elements are fine. But there's a reason why there are so many different interpretations of the Touhous.
4. Games tend to be bad at random access for fanfic reference material. Some are better than others, but the best bet involves multiple saves and/or hoping someone put the cutscene on the net.
"Kitto daijoubu da yo." - Sakura Kinomoto