N-Gage Future in Doubt? 30
srashdotu writes "The Inquirer is reporting rumors that the plug will be pulled on the N-Gage due to the complete closure of the Nokia's Germany production facility by Q1 2006. Nokia has refuted this, however, claiming "We're looking at the strongest line-up of games yet for N-Gage. There's been so much money and effort poured into the system we're not going to pull out now."." Given recent events it is not hard to imagine this being true, though.
Ooo... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ooo... (Score:1, Offtopic)
In doubt? (Score:2)
Terrible design (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Terrible design (Score:2)
Also, the N-Gage does actually use the standard 4 x 3 layout you're describing. Perhaps you're thinking of the 3650?
Re:Terrible design (Score:2)
Re:Terrible design (Score:2)
You've never used one of those "hard-to-use" keypads before, have you?
I use the one on the 7610 every day without any problems. The keys are in the right places, they are just different shapes. Which actually makes it easier for me to type without looking at the keypad.
Yes, I have (Score:2)
Re:Yes, I have (Score:2)
Which Nokia phone? Not all Nokia keypads are the same.
I don't see how the N-Gage keys are in the wrong place. They are in the standard 4x3 grid. 123 / 456 / 789 / *0#. Just like every single phone I have ever used before.
Not in right place on 7160 either. (Score:2)
Re:Not in right place on 7160 either. (Score:2)
My keys are in 123 / 456 / 789 / *0# order. Is there something not normal about this? The control keys are in the perfect place for one handed operation (either left or right, I use either depending on which hand is free). It took no getting used to for me.
The one flaw in the design is the send/end buttons. My sister and a few other people couldn't figure out which was which. One is green and the other is red and they are on the normal sides of the keypads but the icons are a bit weird so I can see how th
Never really believed in it... (Score:5, Insightful)
Business 101 (Score:2)
Good luck with that... (Score:4, Funny)
Me: (while flipping between pages about the Nintendo DS and the PSP) Good for you, Nokia! You might want to work on your timing, though...
Too Bad (Score:3, Interesting)
I picked up a Ngage-QD over the summer ( Cameras are forbidden where I work, and it's the only phone I could find with the features I wanted, but no camera) and I've been very happy with it as a phone.
As for the games? Well, Rayman 3 is a nice platformer, and Pocket Kingdom is a real time sink, but besides that nothing has really caught my eye.
Re:Too Bad (Score:2, Informative)
Um... the source is The Enquirer? (Score:2, Funny)
Wrong foot (Score:2)
Dying? It was dead before it started.
Why in Doubt? (Score:2)
if this was true, this would ALMOST be a shame ... (Score:4, Interesting)
When they were treating it like a mini Playstation 1 at the start, trying to make it run thru 3D hoops it clearly didn't want to, the games were slow and ungainly, and just downright bad. Not to mention the launch lineup was terrible and betrayed their complete lack of understanding of where the game industry is at at the moment.
Tomb Raider? gimme a break. the comic is more impressive than the latest few Tomb Raider games, and Lara Croft has becoming less a gaming icon and more a warning sign that the people you are dealing with are about 2-3 years behind the times gaming wise.
It's only lately, a good year plus after the platform was released that they are finally starting to realise it's potential and starting to tailor the games to the phone, instead of trying to tailor the games to what they think people want while paying no heed to the what the hardware itself is capable of.
One of the latest games, Pathway to Glory [gamerankings.com] is the first game in what appears to be a developing trend of Nokia, or whoever is responsible for selecting games to be ported/developed, of realising that the games have to suit the platform, not the ideal. And with other games of late (Pocket Kingdoms [gamerankings.com], X-Men Legends [gamerankings.com], Worms World Party [gamerankings.com]) showing the same logical thinking behind developing for the platform, things are not necessarily looking up, but at least looking better.
And besides, those bastards managed to buy the Rifts [gamespot.com] licence before anyone thought to pick it up, so I have to stick with the console.
And last but not least, it's actually a very good phone in it's own right. I almost guarantee that the all the people that constantly dump shit on it have either been crying about that initial admittedly pathic oversight of having the game cart behind the battery, or have never actually touched the phone at all. All told, ignoring the terrible games library that's only now slowly improving, the phone itself isn't that bad, and was very cheap for such a featured filled phone.
If it's canned I won't miss it (it's not like I really own it for games anyway although a purchase of Pathway to Glory is looking very likely), but if it's canned now, just as it was starting to show some promise, I'll be honestly disappointed.
I have foresite! (Score:1)
Re:I have foresite! (Score:1)
I learned my lesson from the first palm phone it was over $500 and a few months later when I left that service provider the phone was useless.
Re:I have foresite! (Score:1)
Nature of the business? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think a conversation I heard in EB Games (true) sums it up best:
Customer: So, have you actually sold any of these nGages?
Store Clerk: Nope, and honestly I'd feel pretty guilty if I did