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In the blue corner (or should that be green) we have the XBox One. Will people think that it is 360 times more inferior that the XBox 360? Will they compare it to the PSOne? Is their naming convention too confusing for anyone to truly follow?
And in the brown corner is the Wii U. At least they're sticking to what they know. Stick with the Wii name, because that works. And why not stick with the same policy of not backing it at launch with enough games either, amIright? Then, when the games do come, they're the same games we already played. When did Nintendo release an original game? I'm thinking GameCube era. No doubt when the games do come along they will be good, but the way Nintendo are likely to drip-feed them through there won't be enough to keep people interested. The tablet is neat, but so far no one is doing anything interesting with it.
I think the Wii U could put Nintendo in some serious trouble, but they'll always make money from their games - but could we one day see a day when Nintendo release games on another platform?
So it will be left to the big boys to duke it out. Punches will be thrown. Blows will be landed. At the end of the day many of the big games will be multi-platform, but there will be some exclusives. If you can't call it from the exclusives and you're looking at what else it can do, well frankly I'd go for the Sony kit. It looks better. It won't make you pay for Kinect you might not even want, and, at the end of the day, it looks better.
So! Who will you back in the next generation!?
Only once in the SP did an AI 'do something strange', yet the SP was extremely linear and by its completion had become quite boring!
However, the 'jewel in the crown' was the outstanding MP ... totally enjoyable and sustaining, good maps and positive contacts, no problems with MoH MP at all on the PC.
Your MP screenshot actually looks terrible ... pity anyone having to play a MP game with that display!
Footnote: MoHWarfighter is the pits ... such a disappointment
I know it's only an estimate, but, really? £90 a game? £600 for the console? Is that in Monopoly money or real currency?
Placeholder price obviously. Amazon have a policy of giving you the cheapest price if you pre-order, so if they put the machine at £300 and it actually cost £450, Amazon wouldn't be able to charge more than £300.
chasfh wrote:
The whole DRM thing really doesn't matter. Blown out of all proportion and totally irrelevant on any level(I know I'll get ripped for saying this, but hey, gotta be said..)
PC gamers, as DL said, have NEVER had a resale market of any use. Doesn't stop us buying games, doesn't make them any less enjoyable, doesn't make them any less accessible. It just doesn't matter. Not to games devs, not to console manufacturers, not to anyone.
It's far from irrelevant, some of us only buy 2nd hand games. It's also worth pointing out that PC games are usually about 25% cheaper than console games so it's not as painful for you not being able to trade in.
chasfh wrote:
If you try to kid anyone that you won't buy games any more because of it, or that the games market will go under because you are buying three less a year, then the only person you are fooling is yourself.
I'm waiting to see what happens but I've a pretty simple policy on buying games. I don't pay more than £30 for new and I don't pay more than £20 for 2nd hand. If I can't maintain that, I'll simply opt out because financially I can't do it.
Just as an aside, even if I wanted the new Microsoft machine it'd be useless to me. Landlord doesn't want a phoneline installed, which means no internet and no way to log-in with it.
Incase that hasn't already been mentioned here, you can't use the machine unless you sign in once every 24 hours. It'd be the worlds most expensive brick.
EDIT
What Pete said. Another policy of mine is I don't ever buy something that I could realistically finish in a week. In that respect Lovefilm is fantastically useful and has saved me a fortune.
I don't think I've downloaded a demo for a game in, what, five years?
I also haven't managed to buy a game I didn't like in that time, so I'm either the luckiest person in the universe, the best judge of a game in the world, the least choosiest gamer in the history of gaming...
...or it's really not that difficult. Read reviews, look at screenshots and promo videos, trust devs that you've bought games by before. There are a million reasons why I might choose a particular game, none of which are because I've played a demo.
Here is one example of what I am referring to 2010's Medal Of Honor (half baked Xbox 360 version, which at the time would have set you back somewhere in the region of £40).
***The perception***
Generally glowing reviews
Looked great from screenshots
It was a genre that I generally really like and I had enjoyed previous games in the series, yep it ticked all of the boxes... looked like a case of EA please take my money.
***The reality***
The game had an unbelievably short campaign, hired it on the Friday evening (day of release) and had completed it by Saturday afternoon. Not only that the campaign ended so abruptly it was as if the developers got fed up trying to make some excuse for a story and just released the game as it was. You opened a door and it said something along the lines of ''and you met up with all your soldier buddies went for a beer and lived happily ever after...''
...oh yeah and the AI was for want of a better description....retarded. If you attacked enemy soldiers from straight ahead all was fine but if you decided to sneak past and stand along side them then you suddenly appeared to become invisible, also your squad mates were damn near useless. Although I admit some parts of the game were fun the the whole thing just seemed unfinished and unworthy of a full price purchase IMHO.
...and then there was the online multiplayer....oh dear... never have I played such a mess of a game in my life. Hit detection was atrocious, it lagged like you wouldn't believe and led to nothing more than a totally frustrating and joyless experience.
Luckily I had rented this hugely disappointing mess of a game and not parted with my hard earned cash which I did use to buy something which didn't suck quite so much.
If this had been an Xbox One title I could not have rented it and would have parted with £40 odd to buy something which I could only have re-sold at some Microsoft approved centre for a price I seriously doubt I would have been happy with for a game I was totally done with after less than a day.....no thanks.
[I]As for the pre-owned restrictions, that will also clearly mean no rentals so unless there are demos made available for every game then how are people supposed to know if they are worth buying or not? (that is certainly not the case at the moment) and what about the many games you play through once in 5 hours or so and never bother with again?, certainly been plenty of those in the last few years. Are games developers suddenly going to stop producing titles like those?
I don't think I've downloaded a demo for a game in, what, five years?
I also haven't managed to buy a game I didn't like in that time, so I'm either the luckiest person in the universe, the best judge of a game in the world, the least choosiest gamer in the history of gaming...
...or it's really not that difficult. Read reviews, look at screenshots and promo videos, trust devs that you've bought games by before. There are a million reasons why I might choose a particular game, none of which are because I've played a demo.
Again, I think this is a case of console gamers being stuck with a perception of how things should work, and not seeing that it can work another way. That's the fault of the devs and their marketing. Currently, it's easy to buy a game, try it for three days and return it to the store for an exchange because you don't like it.
Not so for PC gamers on the whole; have you ever tried to get a refund from Steam?
I'm not talking "right or wrong" here, I'm simply saying there isn't any, and that "different" doesn't equate to unworkable or flawed.[/i]
Steam sales and Humble bundles have ensured that I've bought games I didn't end up liking. Likewise, console game sales on sites like zavvi have done the same (£9.99 for a game that was £40 the week before). Actually, I very rarely pay retail price for a console game.
But then I've had my fair share of surprises, too. Surely that's the flip-side of it all? Games like the incredible Journey on PS3, Mirrors Edge etc. New IPs from teams with little in their back catalogue to suggest the content of their most recent game.
We all know it'll be £40 a game at retail.
Still, I guess all our arguments are for naught. Consoles and PCs will be bought (and it seems from recent market research that this is th only growth area for PCs, mostly hardware sales are falling off a cliff). Consoles will still sell in great number, E3 and most other game shows will revolve around consoles, though Valve and others will continue to push PC gaming.
PC gaming will mostly always look better on high end PCs than consoles, and cost less, but consoles will have plenty of exclusives that a certain section of the public will want to play and PCs will do likewise and never the twain shall meet (other than for those of us who appreciate the best of both worlds).
I don't think I've downloaded a demo for a game in, what, five years?
I also haven't managed to buy a game I didn't like in that time, so I'm either the luckiest person in the universe, the best judge of a game in the world, the least choosiest gamer in the history of gaming...
...or it's really not that difficult. Read reviews, look at screenshots and promo videos, trust devs that you've bought games by before. There are a million reasons why I might choose a particular game, none of which are because I've played a demo.
Again, I think this is a case of console gamers being stuck with a perception of how things should work, and not seeing that it can work another way. That's the fault of the devs and their marketing. Currently, it's easy to buy a game, try it for three days and return it to the store for an exchange because you don't like it.
Not so for PC gamers on the whole; have you ever tried to get a refund from Steam?
I'm not talking "right or wrong" here, I'm simply saying there isn't any, and that "different" doesn't equate to unworkable or flawed.
PC gamers, as DL said, have NEVER had a resale market of any use. Doesn't stop us buying games, doesn't make them any less enjoyable, doesn't make them any less accessible. It just doesn't matter. Not to games devs, not to console manufacturers, not to anyone.
INCOMING .... agree :¬)
Just made me think back to when I worked. Two lads in my department were forever buying console games and seconds later were trading them in ... the option is there so it'll be exploited, so to speak
Think those prices are a bit higher than the console & games will actually be on release, Shopto.net have the Xbox One to pre-order for £400, reckon it will be somewhere around that price, as for the games can't see them being much more than current gen titles.
**start of Duncan Bannatyne impresssion**
Forced use of Kinect is a big no no for me, the original Kinect was fun in small and very infrequent doses but it would be annoying as hell having to use the damn thing all of the time. The face recognition and voice command things were totally hit and miss on the original Kinect and it required a fairly large amount of free space and correct lighting levels to get it working properly, are all of these issues going to be sorted on Kinect 2 and does anyone really care? As for the TV thing, that just looks garbage.
As for the pre-owned restrictions, that will also clearly mean no rentals so unless there are demos made available for every game then how are people supposed to know if they are worth buying or not? (that is certainly not the case at the moment) and what about the many games you play through once in 5 hours or so and never bother with again?, certainly been plenty of those in the last few years. Are games developers suddenly going to stop producing titles like those?
I'm out.
**end of Duncan Bannatyne impression**
Actually think I'll stick with my 360 for the foreseeable, Microsoft have done a stellar job of making the vast majority of current gen Xbox owners totally disinterested in their upcoming console. Perhaps they have they hired Gerald Ratner to head up their PR team?
It's the price tag that would make me disinterested...
...if I wasn't already... which I am...
I know it's only an estimate, but, really? £90 a game? £600 for the console? Is that in Monopoly money or real currency?
The whole DRM thing really doesn't matter. Blown out of all proportion and totally irrelevant on any level(I know I'll get ripped for saying this, but hey, gotta be said..)
PC gamers, as DL said, have NEVER had a resale market of any use. Doesn't stop us buying games, doesn't make them any less enjoyable, doesn't make them any less accessible. It just doesn't matter. Not to games devs, not to console manufacturers, not to anyone.
you just think it does because it's there at the moment, and then when it's not there any more, and you give in and buy "just the games I really want to play" you'll have been reeled back in. Job done.
If you try to kid anyone that you won't buy games any more because of it, or that the games market will go under because you are buying three less a year, then the only person you are fooling is yourself.
Okay, I'm braced for incoming....