HD Really The Future of Gaming? 71
Eurogamer.com has an editorial discussing the "HD Future", as revealed in the Microsoft Keynote at GDC. In the article, author Kristan Reed argues that while the crispness of the HD Living Room would be welcome, "using it as a hook to hang next gen console gaming on is misleading to say the least, and there are more than a few barriers to entry for the masses."
next gen (Score:1)
Re:next gen (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:next gen (Score:2)
Re:next gen (Score:2, Interesting)
I guess I haven't found any DVI splitters at any of my local shops, but I've found HDTV splitters at Wally World.
Re:next gen (Score:1)
Re:next gen (Score:3, Funny)
Re:next gen (Score:2)
I recently bought a big screen hdtv and the Gamecube games didn't look that great on it. Luckily I have an older Gamecube with the digital connector so I picked up a composite cable and its a night and day difference. Almost all Gamecube games support progressive scan and they are MUCH clearer and brighter with the composite/progressive hookup than the regular RBG. My wife said it was like she had just put her contacts in, it's that much of an improvement in the picture quality.
Its a s
Re:next gen (Score:1)
So, my hope for the future is that more games support 16:9 format. I know I'm in the minority but I'm keeping hope
Re:next gen (Score:1)
The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
While it almost certainly will look better on a regular TV than an X-Box, HD is not the reason. On the plus side, though, mandating HDTV support in all games is a positive step towards forward-compatability. It will ensure that the console will work well with TV's that come out even a decade down the road.
I still don't understand what all the huge fuss is about though. Was this a surprise to anyone at all? Does anyone think that the PS3 and Revolution won't also have HDTV support in every game? It only makes sense to support the technology as, in 6 years when these consoles are really hitting their mainstream, there's a strong possibility that HDTV will become more of a mainstream technology.
Re:The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:2)
I did pay attention to the MS presentation on the XBox 2 and a lot of the concepts seemed good. Their intense restrictions and (seemingly) rigid standardization makes me afraid that there could be an adverse effect on developers. I think they may rebel against the rules and end up doing stupid shit... but that probably depends more on how the rules are enforced, not how strict they are.
Re:The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
I disagree. What MS is counting on is that in a few short years, maybe as soon as 2 years, you'll have to look for old non-HD TV's when you go to buy.
HD gaming and programming will fuel HDTV purchases, and HDTV purchases will fuel HD game purchases, etc etc.
It's a zeitgeist.. right now most non-HD TV owners don't know what they're missing. That will change quite soon.
Re:The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a zeitgeist.. right now most non-HD TV owners don't know what they're missing. That will change quite soon.
Or, like me, they know exactly what they're missing and find the cost of moving to HDTV still too high. Not only the extra expense of a HD television, but the extra cost of subscribing to HD channels on my cable system. For all of 16 channels of actual HD content that are available to me right now? Meh, not worth it.
Once there's more content, including a final, single standard for HD DVD's,
Re:The HD Revolution!!!!! (Score:2)
I know it is strage to people who are concerned with superior image/sound quality, but many people simply do not
Why is HD a barrier? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:1)
I really hope that MS/Sony/Nintendo put DVI or VGA outputs on their next consoles that allow me to connect a standard PC monitor.
I live in the UK and HDTVs here just aren't happening, and I think it's likely they won't for some time. Letting people connect up a £120 19-inch monitor and actually see the game ought to sell more consoles than using a regular TV and getting sniped by distant enemies rendered invisible by th
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:2)
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:1)
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:2)
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:3, Insightful)
(yes it is [ebay.com])
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:2)
#2 -- Regarding low-income families... what I was implying it that the type of low-income family that would shop at Wal-Mart so exclusively that they would go there for their major electronics purchases... probably isn't spending $700 on a TV. HD equipped or not.
#3 -- Do you think I'm concerned about Wal*Mart selling TVs? They will survive even if gra
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:1)
#1 -- Sign on if you want to argue anything I say.
Slashdot's anti-bot system prohibits persons with vision disabilities from creating accounts [w3.org].
what I'm concerned about is finally getting HDTV mainstream... $700 isn't going to cut it.
Exactly. In January 2007, when FCC pulls the plug on analog TV broadcasting, electronics stores and the local TV stations are going to have to deal with a lot of pissed-off viewers who can't get their Super Bowl XLI.
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:2)
Re:Why is HD a barrier? (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No Surprises (Score:2)
I think that content is king, but I also think that the since of wonder at new technologies on the part of our community is justified. That is to say we ain't see nothing yet.
Re:No Surprises (Score:1)
How many people who have optical audio speakers have been annoyed when their DVDs would not play any sound, due to a stupid and short-sighted copy protection scheme? I would happily pay $20 or $30 more to go completely optical, but having a stupid limitation like that totally breaks the deal.
Here are the questions that I ask about new tech:
1) What can it allow me to do that I cannot do now?
2) What will it stop
Re:No Surprises (Score:2)
Or did I miss something?
Is HD Really The Future of Gaming? (Score:3, Insightful)
For console gaming, yes.
Next article please.
TFA bemoaning the sporadic HD support in current generation consoles, bringing up PC gaming, etc. seems like it is just trolling for an excuse to pick on MS. Yes HD is the future of TV, so of course it's the future of console gaming. And console gamers everywhere will joyously welcome all the HD gaming to come.
What's the point of this article anyway?
Re:Is HD Really The Future of Gaming? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hell, here's a quote from the end of the article "While you have to applaud Microsoft for trying to push on with forward-looking, boundary-breaking ideas that
a bit obvious (Score:2, Insightful)
The question is not if , it is when.
Tv standerds will contiune to improve and pixel counts will push ever updward
Now that These standerds are making the way to the market it is clear that we will see them in games (many have suported HDTV since 2000 or so iirc ).
I expect normal standerds to hang on for a good while longer though
Clever Marketing Ploy (Score:2)
Always remember, the marketing mantra of any consumer hardware industry is: "Talk up a storm about the 'mysti
MS never a visionary company (Score:1, Offtopic)
Innovation happens elswhere. It's been said a thousand times, but Microsoft won't know what business it will need to be in until that business is already two years past them and they adopt it.
Sun and IBM are much bigger risk takers, right now, which is amazing for how big and relatively old these companies are. HP took a big risk too, but...the execution is leaving something to be desired.
If IBM takes off with the theories about IBM-branded Linux desktops, and Sun has a compatible Java Desktop System (L
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
Yes, but it is tangentially on topic, becuase XBox might be all Microsoft has in ten years, in addition to their legacy support base. It's getting to a point where it's hard to charge money for an operating system or an office suite, and the only places that can continue doing so are embedded systems, like gaming consoles (no one really ever sees the OS there--it's a package deal).
It would be pretty retarded for applications makers to ignore UNIX/Linux desktops in the next few years. They can use Qt or J
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
"It's getting to a point where it's hard to charge money for an operating system or an office suite..."
I don't know about that one. Microsoft is doing pretty well from what I've heard. The typical person has this kind of attitude to operating systems:
Microsoft Windows: "Hey! A new version! I better go out and get it right away!"
Apple: "Don't they make the iPod? Too bad they are too elite for me."
Linux: "Isn't that some kind of seed?" (I wish I was joking, someone actually said that w
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
EDIT FOR MY POST:
-"Project Gotham Racing 2" +(some game that is HDTV enabled)
Re:MS never a visionary company (Score:1)
Choice of operating systems? (Score:1)
Well what is stopping them from changing to Linux then? They have a choice of operating systems to use.
Oh really? Go to dell.com and tell me how to get GNU/Linux pre-installed on a new home PC. And tell me how to use consumer-priced flatbed scanners sold new at Best Buy with GNU/Linux when the driver manufacturers don't want to reveal detailed specifications to the SANE project maintainers. And tell me how to run video games from those developers that console makers won't talk to without spending $100 f
480p is NOT NOT NOT HD they != (Score:2, Informative)
720p and 1080i are HD
and nothing the writers ignorance more
it has also been stated (through gamespy articles) that ALL xbox2 games will support 720p
as opposed to the ~31/532 listed on hdgames.net of the current xbox generation
Exactly! (Score:2)
(Bizarrely, the author seems to actually recognize
HD is the distant future. (Score:2, Insightful)
I've been gaming in HD for years (Score:2)
I've been playing in 1280x1024 since 2001, when I got a Gateway computer with a TNT2 in it and a 17" monitor.
1280x720 is 720p HDTV, with 389,120 pixels less than 1280x1024, a relatively common PC resolution.
Ergo, HD console gaming isn't a big novelty, it's just catching up to what you can do with a PC or a Mac.
From an HDTV salesman (Score:2, Interesting)
Having worked at Ulimate Electronics for awhile (before it went bankrupt), I've encountered most of the common questions/confusions regarding HDTV. Despite the fact the FCC is still hammering away at moving towards all digital signals by end of 2006, for the most part the general public is quite clueless about HDTV and digital television in general.
Alot of people I encountered believed that digital cable is HDTV. In realty, the compression used for digital cable usually makes the picture even crappier tha
Re:From an HDTV salesman (Score:1)
I want to know is why PAL on current gen sucks (Score:2)
Why did sony disable HD support in PAL releases of games?
Given the various standards involved, I seriously doubt that it was techincal (i.e. "these games require extra coding to work on PAL HDTVs" that we cant afford to do). Especially in the case of the XBOX (where it should be up to the game maker to decide if they want to invest the $$$ to make their game HDTV aware in PAL regions)
Is the next-gen Xbox true HD? (Score:2)
Low quality article (Score:2, Informative)
The article also claims that mass market HD is 5 to 10 years away. 10 years???? I don't think so. Lots of companies in Japan are already working with Super HDTV (SHDTV) with 3840 x 2160 resolution.
The author doesn't even acknowledge the fact that developers can very simply support multiple reso
Bring it On! (Score:2, Informative)