Talk:Kaneki Ken/@comment-25742728-20150213225127/@comment-24494906-20150214135358

^ And with this, you've probably listed the most relevant remakes of animes adapted from mangas in the last few years. They're mangas that sold about double the number of copies per volume and the remakes were years later (HxH: 10 years after the end of the first anime series, FMA: 6 years). I wouldn't even bet that the Tokyo Ghoul manga will be serialized for that long. Also, usually Young Jump mangas get one anime adaptation and that's it.

Another point you have to consider: There is one man you cannot get rid of during the production of the remake and there's a good chance he's the main culprit who forced the current anime adaptation to be this way: Sui Ishida, the original author. The anime was probably even split into two 12-episodes seasons to accomodate his request for this alternate route, since he needed the time to work out the story. In the unlikely case that there's a decision for a remake, he might want the anime to adapt route B.