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Does the Wii Provide A "Watered-Down" Game Experience?

CNet is running a story inspired by comments from Ubisoft's Ben Mattes about how the Wii affects game development. When asked why there was no Wii version of Prince of Persia, Mattes said, "The reality is that from a technical standpoint, the Wii cannot do what we wanted the game to do. The AI of Elika was highly advanced and required a lot of processing power; the world size and dynamic loading, the draw distance, the number of polygons in the characters... If we had done a Wii version, it would have been toned down, probably linear; it wouldn't have been an open-world game, and so it would have been a very different experience." The article goes on to look at a number of Wii games that are stripped-down versions of their Xbox 360 or PS3 counterparts. Of course, part of the Wii's drawing power is that it's much simpler than the other systems, and has brought casual gaming to millions more people than it would have otherwise. The question remains, as Kotaku points out, whether the Wii's audience will persist after the other systems match its casual-gaming capabilities.

59 of 582 comments (clear)

  1. does an iphone.... by goombah99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    provide a watered down computing experience?

    Wii's are fun.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:does an iphone.... by moderatorrater · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. The Wii is fun, functional, and innovative. The problem isn't the Wii, it's the damn publishers. The Wii's more powerful than the most powerful gaming machines a few years ago and there were a lot of good games back then (unreal tournament 2004, Doom 3, etc). There's enough power in the console, but the creators of the game apparently can't adapt to lesser hardware, so they throw a public tantrum or water the game down so that they don't have to actually think about the problem and develop around it.

      The really ironic thing here is that the market for the Wii is so much larger than the market for the other consoles. Publishers and developers are really shooting themselves in the foot here.

    2. Re:does an iphone.... by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is, games are not about AI and flashy graphics, no matter how much money grubbing publishers want em to be. They're about friendly interaction with your peers. That's why more people use computers to play cards with each other than the latest flashy crap to come down the pipe.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    3. Re:does an iphone.... by Nursie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sorry, what?

      It's a fact that the hardware is less capable than the others. And the others aren't exactly swimming in RAM by modern standards. No, sorry, it's not that they can't adapt, it's that the games they are making now just can't work in the same way on the Wii.

      Now, that doesn't mean the Wii is somehow a bad console - it's a very successful one - it just means that either it's going to hold back the capabilities of games that are released across all three platforms or (far more likely, and in fact happening) encourage an entirely different set of games aimed at a totally different audience.

      What would be the point of owning all three consoles if they all got the same games and had the same capabilities anyway?

    4. Re:does an iphone.... by Yvan256 · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's why more people use computers to play cards with each other than the latest flashy crap to come down the pipe.

      I thought we all agreed to call them "tubes".

    5. Re:does an iphone.... by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wii's are fun.

      Exactly. But "fun" can't be captured in a spreadsheet for quarterly reports. Things like polygon count, map size, load speed, and so on, and so forth, are all readily counted and tracked. The constraints on the Wii compared to the 360 or PS3 means that while some games may lose their edge, most will be improved through the deletion of unnecessary cruft.

      Think of it like your HD. If all you have is a NetBook with a 4GB SSD, you decide whether or not something is worth saving. If you have dual 1TB HD you save everything whether you need or not, and regardless of whether you will ever, ever look at it again. Then it gets filled with crap but you don't know what's important or not because you never had to choose in the first place. Its the same thing with games. Give too big of a world you can create and everything goes in whether it is actually needed or not. The catch, is that it requires more discipline, and that is also far too nebulous for a spreadsheet.

      --
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    6. Re:does an iphone.... by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is a gigantic lack of first or second party games (or locked-in third parties). The Genesis (Mega Drive) and SNES both had about the same specs but the games were what defined them. The problem is, the PS3 and 360 really lack in that area. If you liked Sonic and Sega's games (Shining Force, Golden Axe, Phantasy Star, etc) you got a Genesis. If you liked Mario, Metroid, Zelda, or Donkey Kong you got a SNES. Today other than the Wii, theres not much difference between the PS3 and 360. Square Enix which (especially in Japan) propelled the PS1 and PS2 forward is now making games for all platforms. Halo is good but its still just another FPS, theres not much that can't be emulated with another FPS with shinier graphics, and despite how developed the Halo universe is, theres not that much there that sets it apart from the rest.

      --
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    7. Re:does an iphone.... by gnick · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a fact that the hardware is less capable than the others.

      He didn't say that the Wii was as capable as its peers, he said that it was as capable as the best gaming systems around several years ago when we were getting games like Unreal Tournament 2004. Don't mis-quote and then dispute - That's cheating (i.e. strawman).

      Is the Wii weaker than Sony and MS's systems? Yup. But, like the other guy said, it's novel and fun. And near-zero learning curve (my 2-year-old can play it and my 4-year-old can play it pretty well). It's fun to play with friends with a wide array of genres. It's just not for serious gaming. It's a toy.

      But I agree with GP - The developers are lacking. It hadn't occurred to me before his post that UR2004 could be ported to Wii. But that UR football thing might just be awesome if it was done right.

      --
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    8. Re:does an iphone.... by jidar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Looks to me like he was just pointing out, rightly, that the Wii isn't powerful enough for what he wants to do. In other words, he didn't want to make a Wii game, he wanted to make something that was more on the cutting edge of technology.

      People are making good games on the Wii, but the fact is it simply isn't a very powerful machine relative to the other platforms. You can call that whining if you want but it doesn't make it any less true.

      --
      Sigs are awesome huh?
    9. Re:does an iphone.... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a fact that the hardware is less capable than the others.

      But it's not less capable than a PS2 which had open-ended games like GTA and Jak & Daxter. For that matter, they managed to cram GTA: Chinatown Wars onto the DS, and I'm under the impression that the Wii is more capable than the DS.

      No, I agree with moderatorrater: you can't objectively say that the Wii is incapable of these things. It's more accurate to say that they might be easier on other platforms in this generation, but that's not what Mattes said.

      --
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    10. Re:does an iphone.... by buddhaunderthetree · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly, compare the Wii specs to say the Dreamcast and tell me that the machine is the reason can't create an open world with complex AI. I think the real problem is the lack of design creativity by the publishers.

      --
      "Technology.....the knack of so arranging the world that we don't have to experience it." Max Firsch
    11. Re:does an iphone.... by jidar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Wii attach rate is abysmal and for real gamers games it's even worse. Yeah, 20 million people bought a Wii, but about 15 million of them just played Wii sports then forgot about it.
      The Wii market might be much larger in sheer numbers, but the expected sales for a game like PoP is probably smaller.

      --
      Sigs are awesome huh?
    12. Re:does an iphone.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't understand why people are so rabidly defending the Wii as "fun" and "innovative".

      I grew up playing Mario and Zelda games (and happened to be burned by Nintendo's lack of consumer compassion and their hate for backwards-compatability). But that's mostly what they put out: in-house proprietary sequels.

      There's nothing innovative about Mario anymore; that you can run in three dimensions instead of two doesn't change the game. It just puts a new look on the game. And that look would be better with more powerful hardware.

      Maybe I think of something different when I look for "innovation", like original stories that aren't on their eight iteration of saving the Triforce (Hello, Okami), or fun gameplay that sucks me in without locking me into the same characters that passed nostalgia and hit nausea for me (when I really want to platform, I turn to LittleBigPlanet now).

      Sure, maybe not everyone wants to play GTA or InFamous or Street Fighter, but Nintendo is alienating gamers in order to cater to a broader audience...this doesn't really help gamers at all, nor does it help the video game industry. If "the future" of gaming is less Heavy Rain and more Mario Party or iPhone App Store then I'm going to stop supporting Nintendo and start supporting developers and publishers who push the envelope in terms of what I expect and what I can do. The Wii doesn't really offer me that experience.

    13. Re:does an iphone.... by Freetardo+Jones · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Wii's more powerful than the most powerful gaming machines a few years ago and there were a lot of good games back then (unreal tournament 2004, Doom 3, etc).

      This is total bullshit. The Wii is a 729mhz PPC processor with 88 megs of RAM. I don't know what backwater part of the world you lived in a few years ago, but that isn't even remotely more powerful than the most low-end gaming machines that were powerful enough to play Doom3/UT2004.

    14. Re:does an iphone.... by Darkinspiration · · Score: 5, Informative

      I taught this dam myth was put to rest already, The wii is selling games, a lot of games in fact see here: http://vgsales.wikia.com/wiki/Wii#Best-selling_video_games

    15. Re:does an iphone.... by plague3106 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      no, it's not lack of design creativity.. it's that the PS3 or xbox allow much more detailed, larger worlds, that the wii simply can't handle. I'm going to pick up the latest Tomb Raider on the PS3 to compre it to the Wii version, which was very disappointing. And I played the GC tomb raiders on the wii and had a great time.. i think the wii just couldn't handle the larger, more complex world the newest tomb raider is played in.

    16. Re:does an iphone.... by teg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is, games are not about AI and flashy graphics, no matter how much money grubbing publishers want em to be. They're about friendly interaction with your peers. That's why more people use computers to play cards with each other than the latest flashy crap to come down the pipe.

      "Solitaire" may be the most popular computer game ever, but it's hardly about interaction with your peers :)

    17. Re:does an iphone.... by mwvdlee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So... a reason for NOT liking the Wii would be "my kids like the Wii"?
      Is it just me, or is that type of reasoning completely insane?

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    18. Re:does an iphone.... by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Just for future reference, the GameCube was more powerful than the PS2 and also had better graphics onboard too. Its a shame it wasn't that popular with developers though.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    19. Re:does an iphone.... by SleepingWaterBear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even more relevantly, the top 5 selling games of the current generation (and 7 of the top 10) are for the Wii. Amazingly enough, people don't buy video games just because they're told the games are the most technically advanced - they buy games because they're fun!

    20. Re:does an iphone.... by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's just not for serious gaming.

      Could we please start treating "serious gaming" like the oxymoron it should be?

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    21. Re:does an iphone.... by feepness · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So... a reason for NOT liking the Wii would be "my kids like the Wii"? Is it just me, or is that type of reasoning completely insane?

      Errrr, no. I never actually even said I didn't like the Wii. I said it is not an activity I would pursue on my own. I actually like play-doh and coloring with my kids. I just wouldn't spend $250 plus a zillion dollars for peripherals on a toddler's toy.

      My statement was a response to the original poster, whose point was something along the lines of "The Wii is so great it is simple enough for toddlers." My point was "Things that are simple enough for toddlers generally don't appeal to me on their own. That the Wii is simple is no more a plus than for play-doh or coloring books."

    22. Re:does an iphone.... by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's tempting to use numbers to compare systems like that, but it's also completely misleading. Doom3 and UT2004 played on general purpose computers that were not optimized for gaming, no matter what the specs are. Those games needed a lot of brute force computing to overcome the limitations of the generalist PC design.

      The Wii is built for gaming and practically nothing else. It's more efficient at doing game stuff, so it doesn't require the same kind of oomph as a PC.

    23. Re:does an iphone.... by Khyber · · Score: 4, Informative

      "but that isn't even remotely more powerful than the most low-end gaming machines that were powerful enough to play Doom3/UT2004."

      BULLSHIT. Doom3 on the Xbox - the Xbox is a fucking 733MHz CELERON with 64 MB DDR SDRAM at 200 MHz; 6.4 GB/s .The graphics core is essentially a modified GeForce 3/4 hybrid.

      The Wii - 729 MHz Power-PC based core, 88 MB main memory (24 MB "internal" 1T-SRAM integrated into graphics package, 64 MB "external" GDDR3 SDRAM) AND 3 MB embedded GPU texture memory and framebuffer, and an ATi graphics chip on par with their 9800 series of cards. I'd think with obviously superior hardware doom 3 should have *NO* problem running on the Wii.

      --
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    24. Re:does an iphone.... by grumbel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The trouble is that those games that sell good are all Nintendo games, everything third party only comes in far behind. Even worse, sales don't seem to have any connection to quality, some of the top selling third party games are ranking in the sub-50% category on metacritic. So the Wii isn't exactly a good platform to produce high quality content on, unless you are Nintendo.

    25. Re:does an iphone.... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I taught this dam myth was put to rest already, The wii is selling games, a lot of games in fact see here: http://vgsales.wikia.com/wiki/Wii#Best-selling_video_games

      It's not a myth. The top 10 games are all made by Nintendo itself.

      The Wii is flooded with crap 3rd party games (shelves of nothing but shovelware at my local Gamestop). Quality control on the XBox360 and PS3 seems to result in better 3rd party games.

      I don't buy any games for the Wii any more I've been burned so many times. Who would have thought that a Super Monkey Ball game could have been so terribly bad? But it was.

    26. Re:does an iphone.... by elcid73 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Walking is something my 11 month old boy is very good at, but I still enjoy it from time to time as well.

      What about Go and Chess?

    27. Re:does an iphone.... by Chainsaw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think you're drawing the wrong conclusion. If a third-party publisher would create a game with the same high standards of Super Mario Galaxy or Metroid Prime 3, instead of bad PS2 ports or quick hackjobs... Don't you think they would sell tons and tons of them? The Wii is perfect for FPS games, moving from the clunky and worthless dual-analog control to a mouse+WASD compatible scheme. Despite that, noone has really bothered with doing anything for it other than Conduit.

      --
      War is one of the most horrible things a human can be exposed to. And one of the worlds largest industries.
    28. Re:does an iphone.... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Brand recognition plays a major part in that, the truth is that much of the value in Nintendo comes from the name of Shigeru Miyamoto whether he designed the game or not. What could Shigeru do with his games if he had access to the power of the PS3? Had Shigeru designed his games for the PS3 a Wii version would indeed be a watered down version too.

      Shigeru Miyamoto was a driving force behind the development of the Wii. He's not just a star game producer anymore, he's an actual bigwig in the corporate structure and has a lot of say in the direction the company goes. In a very real sense, the Wii is a game console tailored to what Miyamoto wanted to do with games.

      So the answer to the question "What could Shigeru do with his games if he had access to the power of the PS3?" is "None of the things he wanted to do, which is why they didn't make a console like that."

      I mean, feel free to disagree with Miyamoto as to what console Miyamoto could make the best games for, but I know who I'm going to listen to in that regard.

      In other words both positions are not mutually exclusive, Nintendo games are good AND the Wii provides a watered down game experience.

      Yeah, see, in another post I said that power can be a good thing for games to use to explore things that require that power. But when you've got a game that was designed for a machine with different parameters and within those parameters is a good game, then about the only thing more power will automatically get you is more shinies. Shinies are nice and all, but I don't believe that having hypothetically fewer shinies than it could have means it's "watered down".

      In other words, sure, Prince of Persia designed for PS3 and ported to Wii would have to be 'watered down' compared to the original. On the other hand Metroid Prime Corruption designed for Wii and ported to the PS3 would be watered down too.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    29. Re:does an iphone.... by KDR_11k · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The metacritic scores reflect more on the inadequacy of gaming publications reviewing games not meant for the veteran gamer audience. There is a word-of-mouth network between Wii owners, the sales tend to be fairly concentrated on the system which suggests that people don't just buy stuff randomly but the pattern follows more what the average joe wants from a game, not what a gaming publication wants. Two of the top selling WiiWare games are My Aquarium and Texas Hold'em Tournament, both got panned by reviews but both do their job and the job they do is in high demand. There are claims that the Wii games market is based much more on satisfying pre-existing demands of the customer than the other markets (which use hype to generate a demand for the games on offer). Noone ever says "hey, I'd love to play a game where you're a big bulky space marine crouching behind chest-high walls" but they bought GoW because once the game was shown to them they liked it. The Wii's current biggest sellers are mostly things that people wanted before they were made even though they may not have expected them to be available on a videogame system. Maybe it's harder to show games to Wii owners so they can decide whether they like it.

      On the other hand we have little information about how plain sequels to last gen games would sell on the Wii, the last gen genres tend to be represented by wacky games (like Mad World, No More Heroes, Deadly Creatures, ...) which would be niche last gen too. I think The Conduit may be one of the few attempts at doing a conventional genre straight on the Wii instead of adding some twist that's not what people want. We'll have to see how it turns out.

      --
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    30. Re:does an iphone.... by Sj0 · · Score: 4, Funny

      HOLD IT!

      You're a troll!

      (Which statement proves parent post is a troll?)

      "The Genesis and Super Nintendo had much different specs!"

      I wasn't talking about whether the Super Nintendo or Genesis was better, I was saying they had far different specs -- which your post proves by showing the much different processor used by the Genesis!

      (Slams hand on table, dramatic music starts playing)

      Nobody gives a crap about your stupid wars over 15 year old consoles! Both were outrageously popular and each spawned popular titles whose legacies endure to today!

      --
      It's been a long time.
    31. Re:does an iphone.... by zerocool^ · · Score: 4, Informative

      My problems with the Wii are as follows:

      1.) Lazy. It's essentially a slightly more powerful gamecube. But, it allows you to sell the same stuff to the same people more than once. Also, in 2006, it was barely acceptable that it didn't put out high def. Now, in 2009, with a large percentage of people owning high def widescreen TVs, it's inconceivable that a modern console will top out at 480p.

      2.) Price. It's not that expensive, but it has been out for almost THREE YEARS without a single price drop. Plus, $50 for a new controller. Plus $90 for a bathroom scale. Plus, $50 for the component cable to make it output 480p (see above). Plus, according to E3, a bunch more money for a bunch more controllers. Whenever you point out to someone that nintendo is using cheap hardware, paint-by-number game programming, and proprietary IP to print money, they always come back with "BUT IT'S FUN!!!". What's the last killer title for the Wii?

      3.) Lack of killer titles. Zelda, metroid, Mario Galaxy, Mario Kart, Smash Brothers, Wii Fit... there haven't been many for a console that's 3 years old. Where are the 3rd party games?!? The top 14 games (which comprise 40% of the total game sales of the console) are all proprietary IP; you have to go down to #15 to find a non-3rd party game, and that's Guitar Hero III.

      That's pretty much it.

      ~X

      --
      sig?
    32. Re:does an iphone.... by Mr2001 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Also, in 2006, it was barely acceptable that it didn't put out high def. Now, in 2009, with a large percentage of people owning high def widescreen TVs, it's inconceivable that a modern console will top out at 480p.

      Two-thirds of households are still using SD. Lack of HD is not yet a dealbreaker. Maybe it isn't "acceptable" to you, but you're not the target audience: how many people buying the cheapest console do you really expect to have spent $1000 on a TV?

      When a living room sized HDTV costs $300, then HD support will be a necessity.

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    33. Re:does an iphone.... by oracle128 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What's wrong with the labels is that they're usually not used in reference to vaguely-defined styles of gaming, but that they're branded against people (as in "casual gamer" vs "hardcore gamer") or consoles. Which becomes a major problem when you have someone such as myself, who enjoys playing Wii Sports, Mario Galaxy, Boom Blox or LEGO Batman on Wii one day, then playing Sins of a Solar Empire, Supreme Commander, DEFCON or Starcraft on PC another day. God forbid I should also play Peggle, Spore or World of Goo on PC and MadWorld, No More Heroes or House of the Dead Overkill on Wii, because that just fucks everything up and the little self-assuring pigeon-holing definitions become as pointless as A/V-philes arguing that DVD is for "casual movies" and Blu-Ray is for "hardcore movies" .

  2. News at 11 by adamwright · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you design a game for a machine with 360 specs, it doesn't run very well on the Wii without redesign.

    In other news, Mattes tried running Wii Sports on the 360, but it provided a "Watered down" experience.

    1. Re:News at 11 by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would say (based on the past) that they will release a killer full motion control for the 360 and/or PS2.
      It will be bought by 10% of the customer base, two games will be coded for it.

      And that will be it.

      I own a Wii and rarely use it...But I enjoyed it and it was affordable.

      I do not own a PS2 or 360. Too expensive and the controllers would hurt my wrists since I already have carpal tunnel.

      As others said, the Wii has a gross amount of hardware compared to very recent consoles.

      The A/I issue is a red herring. The primary impact of the PS2 and 360 is higher quality graphics, not smarter AI opponents.

      I don't care about higher quality graphics at those price points.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    2. Re:News at 11 by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Informative

      You keep talking about price..

      The base 360 is $199.
      The base Wii is $249.

      You were saying?

  3. NOTHING wrong with working within constraints by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is nothing at all wrong with working within the constraints of a system and eeking out the absolute best you can from 'inferior' hardware.

    Infact, having limited headroom forces innovative and new methods of doing what was taken for granted before.

    The liqbase UI I am creating for the nokia handhelds makes use of these principles as well :)

    it simply does the best it can within the low headroom of the available hardware.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMXp0Dg_UaY

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
    1. Re:NOTHING wrong with working within constraints by twidarkling · · Score: 3, Insightful

      prettier graphics != better game. Lower the polygon count, drop the draw distance. I guarantee that 80% of gamers won't notice. That 80% being the casual gaming crowd.

      --
      Canada: The US's more awesome sibling.
  4. Give me a break by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The AI of Elika was highly advanced and required a lot of processing power; the world size and dynamic loading, the draw distance, the number of polygons in the characters... If we had done a Wii version, it would have been toned down, probably linear; it wouldn't have been an open-world game, and so it would have been a very different experience."

    Then the platform is not your target. The Wii isn't about pushing the latest fast hardware to its very limits, just so you can push a ridiculous amount of polygons per second onto the screen. It is about making games that are fun... and you can CERTAINLY do that within the confines of just about any machine. Remember the IBM XT? NES? Gameboy? Some of the best games I ever played had nothing but text, running on a 10mhz processor.

    --

    "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
    1. Re:Give me a break by nine-times · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well the worst thing about his complaints is, the new Prince of Persia wasn't a good a very good game. Elika's AI may have been complicated, but it wasn't reflected in the end-product by her doing anything very cool. The "open-world" concept of the game was pretty weak-- getting from point A to point B was linear, but you were just given the option of whether you wanted to go from point A to point B, or from point A to point C.

      Prince of Persia: Sands of Time was a better game, and it was linear. The girl sidekick from that game was just as good as Elika. It didn't require particularly high-end hardware.

    2. Re:Give me a break by Rogerborg · · Score: 5, Funny

      Indeed, when I read "complicated AI", my games dev Spider Sense translates it as "Uses more clock cycles to produces unpredictable emergent behaviour that defeats the level designers' attempts to stop the AI killing itself or humping the scenery in new retarded ways each time you play."

      "AI" is for research projects. If you want an enjoyable game, simple finite state machines FTW every time. It's all about the testability.

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    3. Re:Give me a break by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "AI" is for research projects. If you want an enjoyable game, simple finite state machines FTW every time. It's all about the testability.

      The problem comes when the AI is allowed to make actual decisions. The AI should be there to determine the actor's emotional state, which can then influence the simple lizard brain at the fight or flight (or put another way, "Should I Stay or Should I Go") level. That's pretty much how animals work anyway. When you're running away from something for dear life, you're not putting a lot of conscious thought into what your feet are doing (or your culo.)

      --
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  5. News Flash. by solios · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Wii isn't designed for these kinds of games.

    That's what the X-Box 360, PS3, and PC are for. The Wii is for people who want to play games they can quickly pick up and put down.

    D13 H4rD G4M3RZ are NOT the target audience.

    (Score -1: Obvious)

  6. Why not look at it from another point of view? by tonypeters · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course it provides a 'watered down' experience - when the games in question are ports of the PS3 or the Xbox 360. The hardware and capabilities of the machine cannot compare, so the developers have to shoehorn the equivalent game into the Wii's specs and in the process, trim it down. If you look at individual titles made for the Wii (not ports of other console's games) then no, I really don't think the experience is watered down. Games are games, and people (should) be playing them for the enjoyment and competition. Maybe we should ask the question about some other consoles games that rely so much on graphics that the point of the game is lost and the entertainment factor is lost. Is this a watered down games experience?

  7. As plainly as possible.... by RabidMonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think that the Wii provides a different gaming experience. It can be summarized thusly:

    My mother owns a wii. My father owns a wii. My sister owns a wii. My brother owns a Wii. My cousin owns a Wii. My 3 years old nephew uses a Wii. My grandparents have played on a Wii. Nursing homes have Wiis.

    None of those people have PS3s or XBox.

    Call it watered down, call it casual gaming, call it whatever. It appeals to the masses in a way that the other gaming systems don't.

    --
    We emerge from our mother's womb an unformatted diskette; our culture formats us. - Douglas Coupland
  8. Matching casual-gaming capabilities? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "whether the Wii's audience will persist after the other systems match its casual-gaming capabilities."

    i.e. in the next generation. The Wii is so far ahead in this category that it is laughable to think the others will catch up.

  9. Only when you do lazy ports by Sockatume · · Score: 4, Informative

    It goes without saying that a lazy port of a title to a system with insufficient power to run the original, with chunks cut out to make it fit, will be a piece of shit. It's as true now as when they unveiled Duke 3D for the Game.Com. That tells us absolutely F-all about the remaining 90% of Wii software that wasn't pumped out as a high-return bond by investor-fellating cash-mongers.

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  10. A matter of how you look at it by oneirophrenos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I guess you could flip the flamebait around and ask do PS3 and XBOX360 provide watered-down game experiences for offering games that depend on pretty graphics and not enjoyable gameplay.

  11. Is it a bad thing? by TinBromide · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While certain games (mostly sandbox) require massive ram, processing power, etc to stay competitive (Dead Rising), is it a bad thing that there is a less capable gaming platform out there? Yes, while games like Cooking Mama, Wii Fit, and Mario Party are watering down gaming, the graphics limitations aren't necessarily the cause here.

    I wonder what the development cost for a top notch wii game is. I wonder if its less than one for the PC or other newest gen console. I get the feeling that the reduced graphics and memory put a limit on how many nosehairs you need to bump map for the protagonist. Hopefully, the reduced hardware capabilities mean that the devs don't have to shoot for photorealism and don't need the huge teams to create content. The reduced hardware capabilities = less people required to push a system's graphics to its limit and you don't need a stadium full of graphic artists, AI programmers, mappers, and the more technical side of development just to keep up with the competition. Hopefully this reduced cost will allow GOOD (key word here, as in not bad or cheap) developers to focus more time on building more maps, fleshing out the story more, and generally trading graphics for immersion/world/playtime. I realize that last sentiment is wishful thinking, but a nerd can hope, right?

    I fired up AVP2 not too long ago and it was still a very enjoyable experience. There are also wii games that are very enjoyable. You don't need to have the world painted in photo-realistic brown rubble to have an enjoyable experience. You also don't need to be looking at characters so realistic they're this side of the uncanny valley to suspend belief into believing that something is trying to kill you and facehump your friends.

    --
    Is it sad that I am more likely to recognize you and your posts by your sig than your name or UID?
  12. Um, no by SIR_Taco · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Wii doesn't provide a "watered-down" game experience.

    The developers who port a game to the Wii as an after-thought provide a "watered-down" game experience.

    --
    I say don't drink and drive, you might spill your drink. Before you get behind the wheel just stop and think.
  13. Bollocks by somersault · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I agree that most games on the Wii tend to be lacking in depth compared to the types of games that you get on other systems, I take issue with this:

    If we had done a Wii version, it would have been toned down, probably linear; it wouldn't have been an open-world game, and so it would have been a very different experience."

    If the DS and PSP can handle Grand Theft Auto III games including dynamic loading (the PSP definitely can, though I only noticed the DS version of GTA was out the other day and I don't feel the urge to dust off my DS to have a go of it), there's no reason at all that the Wii can't do dynamic loading too.

    I agree that the AI would probably need optimisation/cutting back and the graphics would need simplified models and effects, but I expect they probably just don't consider it worth the time it would take to do all of that rather than it being impossible to create a game that approaches the same level of gameplay. Having said that, I haven't played any of the Prince of Persia games since the 2D original (and the HD remake). Perhaps the AI is something rather special, or there are hundreds of enemies to simulate at once? Attempting a situation like the last level of Heavenly Sword with literally thousands of enemies probably wouldn't be possible on the Wii without slowing to a crawl.

    --
    which is totally what she said
    1. Re:Bollocks by metamatic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Jak and Daxter games on the PS2 used dynamic loading, and the PS2 hardware was clearly inferior to the Wii in every respect.

      And check out the reviews of GTA Chinatown Wars for DS, Rockstar clearly put the effort in to think about what the DS could do best, and build the game around that.

      Then again, the Prince of Persia team have a history of crappy ports. Their last Wii title was a horrible port with a frame rate that dropped through the floor during the final battle, even though it was derived from the PS2 game.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  14. Guilty as charged by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am one of those that doesn't give two shits how many polygons does the animation have. I find shooters to be utterly boring. Finally, since Ubisoft put their mitts on Heroes of Might and Magic, they (IMHO) devastated the game, which used to be fun - now it's just a big 3D graphic masturbation (I hate when I can't rotate the view in any way, to see what is the path a creature can walk on).

    If the typical Wii user is like me, Ubisoft should keep the hell out of it. Ubisoft wouldn't know a fun game if it hit them in the collective head.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  15. Silk Purse by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Wii itself is not the problem. It's technical specs are not the problem. The problem is the people making games for it and their overall lackluster approach to the whole process. Nintendo and their marketing are to blame for this.

    When they ported Resident Evil 4 to the Wii with new controls, they managed to make it look worse than the original Gamecube version which could be run from the very same console. This is typical of the kind of shoddy workmanship that is put into most Wii games. Games like Mario Galaxy and Metroid show what the Wii is capable of if effort is put in, but most developers aren't willing to go to such lengths.

    It's not just graphics. The overall quality of Wii games is consistently lower than the average for PS2, DS and Gamecube titles. Games are short, rely too much on motion control, lack additional content and generally fall far below the value for money mark. Universally, developers have decided that Wii owners are 4-10 year olds and soccer moms who will spend $60 and 60 minutes on a game before becoming bored. The way you have to flail your arms about to play some titles, I can't say I really blame them.

    As an experiment, the Wii has both hugely succeeded and epically failed. Yes, it has succeeded in selling game consoles to a massively wider mainstream market. But it has also succeeded in proving that in any industry, the mainstream market does not desire quality. The mainstream wants crud. They spend huge amounts on sugary gop and if you serve them up sirloin they'll complain because they prefer the slop.

    The doom of the Wii has been sealed by its user base and existing game library. It doesn't matter if the next Zelda game surpasses the Ocarina of Time or if the definitive FPS of our time is a Wii exclusive. Most existing Wii owners do not want "Triple A" titles or anything close to it. They want Cooking Mama and Wii Fit and Mario Kart, because that's want Nintendo has told them they want, and that's what they got and thats all they'll ever want now.

    So, no developer is really going to spend the effort making a quality Wii title. They're going to make crud. As times passed, this became a self fulfilling prophecy to the point that normal video game players stopped buying Wii's or sold them. The fate of Madworld, poor as it was, is indicative of this trend. It's now a vicious circle which the Wii, and probably Nintendo, have no hope of ever escaping.

    The Wii could have been a success story. Ultimately, graphics don't count for a awful lot when it comes to quality titles, and the breadth and depth of titles on the PS2 prove what can be done with limited hardware. Alas, the Wii did not take this route. Instead of providing affordable quality, it has provided cheap, and you got what you paid for.

    It didn't have to be like this. The Wii could have been the next PS2. But it isn't. Instead it's the next MySpace.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
    1. Re:Silk Purse by Hebbinator · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Your frame of reference is obviously that of a "normal video game player." You are not the Wii's target market, and thus you feel understandably disenfranchised. I just cannot manage to see how appealing to the "mainstream market" ie normal, everyday people, reflects a failure in development. I also think that you drastically underestimate the number of shitty games for the PS2. There were close to 2500 games made for that console, and if you think the average quality was that great, then you have never been in a gamestop bargain bin.

      In writing this comment, I am aware of the fact that there are not as many top-quality wii games as I would have hoped or expected at this stage of development. However, I think that the games designed specifically for the wii are fantastic, and I blame the deficit partially on poor ports and the cost barriers involved when companies decide to develop a title. After all, if you were a developer, would it appear to be more cost effective to program for joysticks and buttons than a novel motion-capture interface? Of course, because the title can be sold to PS3 and Xbox and PC users alike, and your staff likely has more experience in programing for these interfaces.

  16. Its the games .. by StandAloneMatt · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did the PS2 persist once the Xbox came and reduced the PS2 to a graphically "watered down" experience. Its not the tech, its the games - the first time Microsoft or Sony show the ingenuity and skill to produce something as intuitive and universal as Wii Sports or Wii Fit, then Nintendo might have some competition in the "casual" arena. Until we see some games and support Natal and whatever the PS3 motion controller is called is nothing but a Sega Activator/Eye Toy/Six-Axis wannabe and not a real factor.

  17. Re:Sure are a lot of butthurt Wii fans here by spyrochaete · · Score: 3, Informative

    You're missing the point. Read the title of the article. The consensus seems to be that the imagination and ability of developers is watered-down, not the Wii itself.

  18. Gameplay...it's all comes back to what's fun by Anubis+IV · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Someone earlier identified the developer's "poor AI" argument as a red herring, and they were absolutely spot on, but I would take their line of argumentation in a different direction.

    If anything, the developer needed to call out the lack of power on the Wii in order to hide the fact that if the game had been ported to the Wii, it would have had nothing going for it at all. At least on the PC/PS3/360, it was graphically gorgeous, but the gameplay was lacking, the story was subpar, and the experience was altogether repetitive and boring. Sure, it was fun for awhile, but all of the people I've talked to agree that the game did not live up to the hype and that it was not as fun as past titles in the series (standard disclaimers apply that this is merely anecdotal evidence and not indicative of the experience for everyone).

    Given that the Wii has subpar hardware by modern standards, and this is true for nearly any title on the Wii, the focus falls on solid gameplay and the "fun factor". Solid graphics on other systems can enhance enjoyment, but they rarely create enjoyment. If you stripped away the graphics of the game, such that the worlds had shorter draw distances, the characters could not be as animated, and the polygon count had to be lowered, I'm of the opinion that there just wouldn't be much else to catch and hold the attention of the gamer. For a game that relies so heavily on the graphics as a selling point, not only would the developer need to "water down" the game to make it simply run on the Wii, they would also need to significantly rework the game in order to make it enjoyable, period.

    In a case like that, it's easier to blame the console's lack of power than your development teams' lack of innovation.