FF XI Goes Live in Japan
Castolari writes "Gameforms reports about the Japanese launch of FF XI, Square's online venture with
the series. Apparently, there's some serious technical problems with the
server load as well." They also have some
Screenshots.
I'm still hoping that someone will get the MMORPG right in the not so distant
future.
I don't know about you but for some strange reason playing football (soccer), basketball etc with my mates is for some reason alot more fun than looking at a computer game.
Life isn't watching a TV set, and as good as graphics get, no game will ever equal that feeling as you blast in a shot from 20 yards, or nail a 3 pointer over your work mates.
Games are fun, but if you can't tell the difference between a game and your life... then you need help.
And no game ever will beat the smile you get from your kid first thing in the morning.
Cool game, I might get it, but please... like real life ?
An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
So, Round 1 of the console wars is over, with Sony far in 1st place, and Nintendo and the Xbox somewhere in second. (Most of my figures say Nintendo is in the 2nd place slot, but its so close nobody can tell.)
Round 2 has now begun - and it's over before it's even started. Look at the competition:
Sony - spend $150 on a 40 Gigabyte hard drive with ethernet and modem ports. Use with any ISP you with. Developers provide the servers.
The games: Final Fantasy XI, Everquest, and Star Wars: Galaxies
Nintendo - spend $35 on either an ethernet adapter, or a modem. Use with any ISP you want. Developers provide the servers.
The Games: Phantasy Star Online 1 and 2.
Xbox - spend $0 dollars - but you have to sign up for a fee (price unknown, assumed to be $5-$10 a month). Servers maintained by Microsoft (a point that kept that kept EA out of the Xbox online system.
The Games: Um....
This is why I sold my Xbox yesterday. (And have exactly enough in store credit that I could get a new one in case the Xbox comes out with something pretty damn cool.)
But so far, Sony is far and away doing the best job with online gaming, and with their partnership with AOL, and the Linux system on the PS2, I think the fears Microsoft had (as detailed in the first part of the book Opening the Xbox, where the Xbox was mainly a reaction to the fear that the PS2 would become a hoome computer), are all coming true.
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel