Self explanatory. Further, mention any particular differences you think are worth noting.
BloodRayne 1 for GameCube and Steam - A more recent one as I got BOTH versions this month, first on the GameCube from an Amazon seller, the other on a Steam sale (which BloodRayne 2 was part of, so I went and got both games). I found out on Steam message posts that, apparently, the PC version censors out Swastikas, and yet, ironically, the GameCube version (like the PS2 and XBOX versions) keeps it (yes, a Nintendo version of a game keeping any form of Nazi symbolism, hella weird -if ironic is not the right term- after what happened to the SNES version of Wolfenstein 3D). With that in mind, I'm kind of tempted to get even the PS2 versions of both games (or at least for BR2).
Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 1 for GameCube (NTSC US) and PS2 (PAL UK) - A few note worthy differences, both regionally and console specifically. Both games, despite being the same across every package that gen (not sure about the HD version), have slightly different art styles, while regionally, they have different intros and audio dubs (PAL version sticks to the original Japanese voice acting, while the US version uses FUNimation's cast).
Graphics and intro differences below:
PS2 PAL
GameCube NTSC
James Bond 007: Nightfire (console versions specifically) for GameCube (PAL UK) and PS2 (NTSC US) - Had it for GameCube since my last months in the UK and only got the PS2 version recently as a gift from my aunt. From what I understand, the latter version suffers just a bit from longer loading times in comparison to the GC and XBOX versions, and watered down (as well as kind of cumbersome, courtesy of the PS2's backwards multitap requirement for more players) multiplayer. Still, a bit better received than the surprisingly even more inferior PC version.
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Majora's Mask for N64 (NTSC US) and GameCube (PAL UK; via Collectors Edition, plus Master Quest for the former) - Nothing too big on differences on these ones (putting aside Master Quest content for OOT), except Majora's Mask, while still playable, has a habit of freezing a bit more than it should. You could do FAR worse for broken ports of classics though.
The Urbz: Sims in the City for GameCube and DS - A case of same name, different game on this one, especially being that gameplay wise, the latter is a more open follow up of the GBA version of Bustin Out.
What multiplatform games do you have more than one version of?
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