More Next-Gen Console Smack-Talk
With the PS3 now out the door in Japan, Nintendo and Microsoft are engaging in what is essentially the last moment for smack talk before everyone's cards are on the table in the U.S. On Microsoft's part, they're complaining in Europe that they want to go head-to-head with the PS3, and can't until next year. Xbox EU Boss Neil Thompson says: "In a lot of ways we'd like people to put the system side-by-side and see whether people want a platform where they're paying for Blu-ray straight away." Meanwhile, Nintendo is taking shots at both companies, saying that the next-gen DVD format war is bad for consumers. Says Nintendo Canada's Pierre-Paul Trépanier: "I think forcing a decision on consumers would certainly not be part of Nintendo's strategy, because we want to get more people into gaming and we want to make it affordable. Forcing people to adopt a technology and a model that's proprietary and still not established is unfair to gamers."
I don't see how M. Trépanier's comments qualify as "taking shots at both companies." He's saying that forcing unproven, proprietary formats on consumers is a bad decision. As far as I know, only Sony is "forcing" such a format. The HD-DVD add on to the 360 is just that, an add on, and won't even be used for game content (unless there's been news to the contrary that I've missed...?). So the 360 is using DVD as the medium for its core functionality (games), just like the Wii is.
(Or is it "Wii are"?)
Either way, I'm going to be one of the losers in line hoping for a Wii this weekend. Hopefully, the combination of deer season and a Wisconsin November will keep them short for me.
Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
lets just hope that the wii will have some good games, i could only find 5 games that i liked and those where muti-system anyway
I think /. as a whole tends to agree with Trépanier. Don't FORCE proprietary media formats at us through a console. In the end it comes down to what the consumer spends their money on. A good percent of people know they're getting a Blu-Ray player and that it's non-gaming functionality directly competes with HD-DVD if they purchase a PS3. I'm sure a lot of them see the Blu-Ray as a bonus. But I'd say even more people are outraged that Sony is offering them a product that is overpriced because of functionality they don't want or need. The consumer has a right to be angry, too. I know I wanted to play the next Gran Turismo, but now I doubt I ever will.
This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
Nintendo is a great gaming company, and I'm excited about their resurgence with the DS and the Wii, but it will be a long time before I'm willing to hear someone from Nintendo lecture the industry about a "proprietary model." The Wii's support for DVD is one of very few times that the big N has strayed from its defining "not made here" syndrome. Have we already forgotten Nintendo's numerous examples of proprietary lock-in—one example that comes to mind being the GBA-SP's notorious "headphone jack"?
Microsoft may mock Sony as they haven't managed a world wide launch but at least the PS3 has a European launch date unlike the Microsoft Zune which doesn't look like it is going to be on sale in Europe any time soon.
and remember Sony originally backed BetaMax....
But look at it this way, if Blu-Ray fails, your PS3 is still an incredible game machine. If HDDVD fails, your XBOX360 add-on is a useless piece of plastic.
But the question is, does the Blu-Ray make the PS3 an incredible game machine, or is it the other technologies (cell, etc.)? If the Blu-Ray isn't adding that much to the gaming experience, then it's just adding extra cost to the customer. Some people are saying that developers are already filling Blu-Ray discs for individual games, but I wonder if that's because they're just not compressing anything, or what the deal is... I haven't heard any complaints that the XB360 discs are filling too easily, though, so is the expense of Blu-Ray really worth it?
Also, I understand what you mean about the HD-DVD add-on for the XBox, but at least that $200 cost is optional. It's just for watching movies, so if you are worried about HD-DVD failing, you can not buy it at all. From a larger perspective of HD-DVD vs. Blu-Ray, though, I feel comforted by the fact that HD-DVDs can be manufactured with a DVD side, so I could buy the HD-DVD discs now, even though I haven't moved up to a Blu-Ray or HD-DVD player, and whatever happens in the format war, I'd still have the DVD disc at least, so it's not a total loss. Of course, when I was browsing the HD-DVD titles at Target the other day, I didn't see any that made use of the hybrid DVD feature, so that may be a moot point anyway.
Obviously Microsoft is doing the same with HDDVD since they're one of the founders (and because Sony supports the other).
I believe Microsoft was not a founder or original member of the HD-DVD group at all, but that they aligned themselves with HD-DVD later on. I could be wrong, though.
Having mostly ignored the format wars I don't understand Nintendo's statement. For consoles the disc media is meaningless, no? I mean it's not like I can take a Wii game and stick it in my computer and play it.
The only format forcing is the one that's always been there. If you want to play Nintendo games, you buy the Nintendo hardware. Same for Sony and MS.
The HD-DVD add on is optional and the ability to play Blue-Ray on the PS3 is just a bonus.
I don't see the problem.
Sony products == non
Microsoft products == non
Nintendo's wii == oui!
I love how nintendo fans can so eloquently tell everyone that sony forces new technology people don't want, and that with nintendo, there's choice.
How many people plan on buying a wii with 1 controller, anyone? Didn't think so, that'll be $60 for each other player.
How many people plan on playing VC or GC games on the wii, anyone? Yeah, that's $20 for each player.
How much space of memory you think the wii comes with, enough? Well you can all ways "choose" to buy an extra sd card.
Don't you love the illusion of choice?
"NASA's Rollercoaster For Moon Rocket Escape"
Xonk?
.. and here was me thinking this was news that there was a PS3 of the Smacktalk being released. Which is, for anyone who's not heard of it, a device that sits between the 360's headset and console and lets you assign swearing and sound samples to various buttons. I'd buy one to assign a bunch of Dr Weird voice samples to if they weren't so expensive, and if they were actually available in the UK.
http://www.thebestpageintheuniverse.net/c.cgi?u=so ny_bullshit
Scorta futuere amo!
http://microsoftisawesome.blogspot.com/2006/11/ps3 -vs-xbox-360-screen-shots-update-2.html
Wii and a 25$ divx player.
/.'s opinion on this, I'd love to know.
:)
I mean, c'mon guys. I know the next-gen storage format war is important to movie enthusiasts and people who have huge storage needs, but the rest of us are still happy with our "old" technology, and don't see (or care about) the artifacts or "bad quality" of the image. I mean, there's being interested in bleeding-edge, and then there's being anal about a percent performance increase.
I thought we geeks cared about content, low prices, and squeezing the most life out of any piece of kit, however old it may be. What's the rest of
And on the upcoming games front? Personally, I am not interested by either the Xbox 360's or the PS3's offerings, even though I enjoyed the main franchise games on both consoles' predecessors. We have already witnessed how the cheaper, innovative console is more fun in many ways to the expensive, state-of-the-art piece of hardware that "isn't a console". (yes, I am in eternal love with the DS)
You may now post your best "Wii is barely powerful enough to run MARIO PONG : kidz version" flames...
So the PS3 has enough room to provide massive content in it's games.. and XBox and Wii don't. To me that's all I need to know. What's the point of a next gen console that can't even provide more detailed and massive enviroments to game in? A graphics boost is nice as is improved controllers but I want better gameplay and that means more data available to the games, better physics, better AI, etc.
I'll get a PS3 but I have no plan at all to upgrade my movie buying to HD-DVD or Blue-Ray or to use my next gen console for playing movies. The biggest deciding factor for me as to when I will switch to a HD movie format is when the format is cracked so that the security measures no longer work. I won't buy movies I can't copy and modify (removing menus, etc).
At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
I bought Paper Mario a while back and I just have to say that I loath that game despite all the rav reviews I saw for it. It's boring with lame puzzles that require mostly trial and error or repetitive tasks than actual thought or skill and the dialog is so lame as to be a crime. I love the Mario family of games and RPG style games but Paper Mario is just a mockery of both.
I do like the Skies of Arcadia remake for Gamecube (a bit better than the Dreamcast version) and the Gamecube I think is the choice platform for party games. I think Nintendo is making a mistake by choosing a design for the Wii that looks more like the PlayStation instead of keeping the easily portable little cube design of the Gamecube.
I'd like to see Nintendo shrink the form factor of the Gamecube further and bring it's price down to around $50 as I think they could really hit the market for younger kids and party players if they did. Maybe add some Wii-like controllers while their at it. I think a smaller, cheaper, and improved Gamecube could sell better than the Wii. The Gameboy isn't all bells and whistles like the PSP but it consistantly sells better than the PSP and similar expensive rivals. I think the Wii price is to high for the market it's going after.
At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
Except that back then, it was EITHER betamax OR vhs. 1 was bound to superceed the other.
Whereas today, while Microsoft and Sony kill each other in a blood bath, the consumer will only start buying once no-name asian constructors bring to market dual standart recorder that records both HD-DVD and BlueRay.
It's more "DVD-R vs. DVD+R vs. brand-less multi-standarts".
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
For the confused or misinformed-- the general public who purchases a HDTV will ask themselves a question: how do I get high definition movies? The answers right now are HD-DVD and Blu-ray. Both cost the same, but one comes with a next-generation video game system attached.
The people pissing and moaning about not having choice-- namely Microsoft, are the very people who lock you out of options for the Zune, Windows, Internet Explorer, and Windows Media Player. Don't believe that they've changed their heart. They're arguing this point to further their position in a market they do not control. They are confusing customers with HD-DVD and prevent game makers from using the medium to deliver games. If it doesn't come standard, it won't be done on the 360. Period. That goes for ALL consoles, not just the 360.
Nintendo? They've just released a GameCube with a new arthritis-inducing controller that has almost no media options built in. Of course they'll argue you don't want to confuse the two. They can't afford to compete in that space and they rightfully chose NOT to. Kudus to Nintendo-- but they really painted themselves into a dead-end architecture IMHO. No DVD. No CD. No next-gen anything. I'm still baffled, but I certainly don't want Nintendo to do poorly. They just aren't competing against Sony if you ask me.
Now let's look at Sony. The pioneer and co-inventor of DVD. Do you think it was coincidence that the PS2 came shipped with a DVD player and that DVD sales exploded when the PS2 came to the market? The PS2 single handedly made DVD a new standard. When DVD players became a commodity, people then bought them as stand alone players, but the PS2 started it.
Sony made DVD a standard and Blu-ray will, aside from an unprecedented problem occurring, be the new delivery media for high definition movies. Why would last generation be any different than this one, barring a huge screw up?
Despite the fanboys on each side of the debate, consumers will make blu-ray the de-facto standard. Nobody currently debating this topic will be. We're the early adopters. We're simply going to tell our neighbors to get a PS3 to watch HD movies. We're the ones that will get the ball rolling, but we sure as hell aren't going to be the 100 million units sold. We're easily 1/10th of that.
"Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
that statement sounds awfully funny coming from a company that has always pushed their own proprietary formats. has everyone forgot about those cartridges that made the price of n64 games balloon to $60+ in the 90s? correct me if i'm wrong, but i believe the gamecube's discs are proprietary as well. even if the gamecube discs were standard, nintendo is still out of line with that comment. nintendo is the anti-standard, which is good in some ways and bad in others. mark my words, if they get burnt this go round for the Wii's lack of HD compatability, the next console they make will have a proprietary "HiiiD" holographic display.
Blur-Ray and HD-DVD can use the same codecs. From Wikipedia:
Both of the new formats [Blu-Ray and HD-DVD] are backward compatible with DVDs and both employ the same video compression techniques: MPEG-2, Video Codec 1 (VC1) and H.264/MPEG-4 AVC.