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The Revolution will also be a wireless router for the home, connect broadband to it and it will allow nearby consoles to link and go online. Such as a DS for example.
Rumours:
Revolution will be VERY cheap, will be only a little more powerful than a Gamecube and vastly inferior to X-box 360 and PS3. There will be multiple controllers, touch screen, gyro and camera are all being touted.
If the latter is true then I told you Nintendo are gunning for a different market.
> No, it didn't. What changed gaming was the processing power of the
> N64.
>
> Are you saying that mario 64 would have been the same if it was on
> the SNES but used an N64 controller? It wasn't the analog stick that
> made the N64 great, it was the fact that the increased power allowed
> for new, 3D games! Analogue control is just a more precise form of
> control, it doesn't change the way you play games.
Oh... My... God.
> No, it didn't. What changed gaming was the processing power of the
> N64.
It also failed to make the N64 compete well with the Playstation, which for a long time, SHOCK HORROR, didn't even have analogue control!
> tigamilla wrote:
>
> All of those were 4 player andall of them had a selection of bots to
> team up against - where is this on the cube?
>
> Thankfully the RPG's will keep me going but I want nothing else on
> the cube except those.
Yea at least we have a few more RPG's on the 'Cube.. and we actually got to play a Paper Mario game.
> FinalFantasyFanatic wrote:
> Dringo wrote:
> But it isn't, it is a revolution... it is online... it has new
> control systems...
>
> They're all online.
> And excuse me for being cynical, but nothing relating to the new
> control system has appealed to me more than an actual controller
> with
> buttons on it.
>
> Get a different console then.
Aha.
But by the looks of things ... I probably will.
Shame to miss out on all those quality Ninty games because I have to shout 'WALK!' or tilt this whole heavy clod of plastic forward or drag my finger along a strange bar I have to keep looking at instead of the actual game.
>
> I liked the N64 because it was the most advanced system at the time,
> and the games all the more playable because of it.
The Xbox is pretty much the N64 this time around, popular enough, full of weird titles, packed with 4 player+ multiplayer options and more FPS games than you can shake a stick at.
I like Zelda and... well no just Zelda now since everything else isn't as good as their N64 versions but more importantly I want my western titles that I loved on the '64 like Roadrash 64, Wipeout 64, Forsaken 64, Duke Nuken 64 and all those weird and lovely things.
All of those were 4 player andall of them had a selection of bots to team up against - where is this on the cube?
Thankfully the RPG's will keep me going but I want nothing else on the cube except those.
Considering how die hard a Ninty I was with the N64, and now I own a total of 4 GC games after ditching it once before, this is why Nintendo are wobbling all over the place with their demographical targeting.
> Oh yeah you're right, the analogue stick didn't change gaming at all.
It was 'hey yeah this is really good'
And then everyone stopped caring.
> Dringo wrote:
> But it isn't, it is a revolution... it is online... it has new
> control systems...
>
> They're all online.
> And excuse me for being cynical, but nothing relating to the new
> control system has appealed to me more than an actual controller with
> buttons on it.
Get a different console then.
Are you saying that mario 64 would have been the same if it was on the SNES but used an N64 controller? It wasn't the analog stick that made the N64 great, it was the fact that the increased power allowed for new, 3D games! Analogue control is just a more precise form of control, it doesn't change the way you play games.