Impressions From A Second Shipment 360 Owner 427
The setup wizard asked for little more than the time zone and my Passport account. The Live account I had with the Xbox was still in good standing, putting me into the 'gold' version of the Live system. This apparently allows me the opportunity to get to some additional content, and make use of the Trueskill ranking system we reported on a while back. The only annoying part of the setup was the grueling process of entering my email address and password. Selecting letters from an on-screen keyboard seems like a good idea until you start entering your 32-character-long email address. As a final touch I was asked my preferences for controls in FPS and Driving titles. I don't know why, but I like inverted look on console games. It just works better for me. By entering the setting on my Live account, every FPS I play on the 360 will use that setting by default.
Setup completed, I had my first look at the 360 'blade' system. The interface for the console is a series of screens arranged in an interlocking pattern of tabs, or blades. Flipping between the different screens is as easy as moving the thumbstick. It's a remarkably intuitive and clean interface, and really hits home the 'next-gen' feel of the console. First thing, I hopped into the Live Marketplace and purchased some Microsoft Points. As much as I was looking forward to playing Call of Duty 2 and King Kong, I'd heard such good things about the downloadable game experience that I wanted to check them out right away. I also wanted to snag the Penny Arcade Skins and gamer portraits. These games and downloadables were purchased with the Points, which are Microsoft's way of putting an additional step between users and their credit cards. Parents who don't want their kids racking up bills via Live can purchase pre-paid Point cards in stores, ala the time cards for a MMOG. You can also buy them directly through Live if you have a credit card on file. They sound like more of a deal than they are, unfortunately. Game downloads range from about 400 to about 800 Points, and right now Live is offering 1000 Points for $12.50 (or $.05 for four points). You can buy about three games then, give or take, for $25.00. A steal compared to most console titles, but not as inexpensive as you might like. Theme packs that re-skin your blades run about 150 Points, and packs of icons for your GamerTag are about 50 Points. There are exceptions, of course. The Penny Arcade icon packs each have several icons to choose from, and cost 200 Points. Expensive, but Mr. Period was worth the $2.50.The downloadable games are wide-ranging in playstyle, and offer something for just about everyone. Classic titles like SmashTV, and Joust sit beside modern hits like Zuma and Bejeweled. There are also brand new and indie titles, like Geometry Wars Retro Evolved and Wik: Fable of Souls. The console also comes with a shiny puzzle game already unlocked for you, called Hexic. Hexic has you rotating groups of three colored blocks, seeking to make groups of same-colored shapes. It's not the most brilliant puzzler ever, but it is good looking and is something to kill time with if you're not interested in downloading anything. Which would be a shame, because all of the games in the Live Marketplace offer up free trials. The cost is the time to download, and the reward is the chance to recall just how badly you played the original Gauntlet. The Live title I've gotten the most enjoyment out of is Geometry Wars Retro Evolved. Originally a simplistic little extra on Project Gotham Racing 2, Geometry Wars has been reinvisioned for the Live Marketplace. It's a beautiful old-school shooter in the style of Asteroids, with a lot of attitude. There are over a dozen enemy types, several blaster styles, and loads of extremely challenging gameplay. I've accomplished the 'get 100,000 points' Achievement, but only just. Even then, as of this writing I'm number 16,618 on the Geometry Wars leaderboard. Judging by the leaders on the leaderboard, the game is not only challenging but addictive as well.That Geometry Wars Achievement is one of the easier ones to obtain for that title, most of them centering on surviving for prolonged periods of time. They're somewhat simplistic, given the nature of the game, but every game has their own style of Achievement. Xbox Live Achievements are 'Kilroy was here' moments in games made for the Xbox 360. Every title is required to have some, and it varies from game to game how many there are and how hard it is to obtain them. Call of Duty 2, for example, hands you one for completing Basic Training but then denies you additional kudos until you've beaten large parts of the game. Kameo, on the other hand, gives you an Achievement every time you obtain another Elemental Warrior (which happens relatively frequently). They're viewable through your GamerTag, and are an interesting way to check in and see how far your friend has made it through a given title.
One of the benefits of waiting a month before purchasing my 360 was knowing what games to get and what titles I could safely avoid. With PDZ mostly snagging 8/10s, I decided to pick up Call of Duty 2 instead as my launch-title FPS. Jack Black and Peter Jackson was just too appealing to me to pass up (not to mention the big monkey), so I grabbed King Kong as well. Kameo's colorful visuals and morphing gameplay also seemed very appealing, and I chose that as my third launch title.
Call of Duty 2 (CoD 2) has earned its reputation as the cream of the 360 launch title crop. The game powerfully recaptures the thrill of the original title, placing you in the shoes of a grunt on the Russian, British, or American fronts of World War II. Gameplay is fast-paced and finely honed, with a control scheme that for the first time feels effortless to this PC gamer. The 360 controller, overall, has a wonderful feel to it. It's not even as large as the S-type Xbox controller, and the thumbsticks are incredibly responsive. I've always had some 'user-related issues' playing FPS titles on the console, but the 360 controller feels extremely natural in my hands. Call of Duty 2 makes use of every button on the controller, and the schema feels very intuitive once you've gone through basic training. The game not only plays well, but looks terrific too. I wasn't sure what exactly to expect when I first began playing a 360 title (as still images just don't do next-gen games justice), but I have been extremely impressed. CoD 2 lives, breathes, and clips along at 60 frames per second without blinking. The snowy enivrons of Russia, the ice crusted to the fringe of my commander's longcoat, and the billowing emissions of a smoke grenade all come together to form an immersive experience. If I had to choose a 'best of' element for Call of Duty 2, it would be the AI. German soldiers dive for cover, snipe from afar, and use suppression fire to support their troop movements. Your Russian squad-mates call out enemy positions in simple and understandable terms. They have your back if you run out of ammo, and keep the baddies under cover as you sprint towards your next objective. Call of Duty 2 is easily the finest launch title the 360 has to offer.The 360 version of King Kong has been in the news recently because of some darkness issues. While it is indeed very dark, on an HD screen the light is more than sufficient to make out the creepy-crawlies coming in your direction. King Kong plays mostly like an action-adventure FPS, with you in the role of writer Jack Driscoll. Driscoll and a motley crew of movie-makers make their way through the creepy enivrons of Skull Island. Originally on the island just for the scenery, the game quickly becomes a race after the giant ape Kong who has stolen leading lady Ann. The primitive environment plays a role in the game's story and gameplay. While ammo is plentiful in some FPS titles, Kong has you relying on periodic supply drops from a low flying plane. Once you're out of ammo, you're reduced to using spears as weapons against the giant centipedes, dinosaurs, and flying harpy-things that plague your every step. Kong has a lot of atmosphere, and even on normal mode is fairly challenging. My biggest complaint with the title is the occasional puzzle element. Doors must be opened via a pair of rotating gate mechanisms, and at various points in the game you're required to find the handle for one or both of these mechanisms. Looking for a small handle in a large outdoor space with variable lighting is, regrettably, not very fun and serves mostly as a way to add time to the game. The 'best of' element is definitely the infrequent sequences where you get to play as Kong. The sheer power he displays, compared to the squishiness of Jack Driscoll, makes for a refreshing change of pace as you progress through the game. Kong is only so-so as FPS titles go, but when at its best it offers some beautiful vistas , scary moments, and "omgdinosaurz" gameplay.Kameo has gotten a lot of mixed reviews since the 360 launched, and with good reason. On one hand, it has beautiful cartoony graphics. The world evokes a sense of wonder, and the characters that inhabit the various realms are all kind of goofy-looking. On the other hand, it's a violent game with a decent amount of gore. Splattering bugs and plant-monsters tosses a green goo at the screen, which slides down the inside of your television screen. One elemental warrior has a move that impales enemies on his back, and then uses them as thrown weapons. A forgettable plot doesn't help things, either. Kameo was living a fulfilling life as a princess when her sister went black hat and released the evil Troll King. They capture your family and strip you of your powers, and you're off on a crusade to get everything back. There are some amusing story elements that complicate things a bit, like a conniving seer with aspirations of power, but for the most part the game plays out exactly as you'd imagine. You move from place to place in the game world, collecting warriors and freeing your family members. Each Elemental Warrior offers up specific abilities that can be used to circumvent obstacles. The plant-boxer can dive into the ground to move under gates, the dragon-form can light torches with his breath weapon, and the rolling armadillo-guy Major Ruin can use his rush attack to leap chasms. Despite the predictable plot, there is fun to be had, here. Once you have a few warriors under your belt gameplay gets switched up relatively often, requiring you to recognize what form will work best fairly frequently. Combat itself is quick and mostly satisfying, and each warrior has a bevy of upgradable powers to play with. The problem really boils down to who exactly this game is for, though. The graphics say young player, the violence says teenager, and the spine-gratingly annoying 'helper' says functional imbecile. Even halfway through the game your hand is still being held with regard to power use and puzzle-solving, and it gets more than a little annoying sometimes. Kameo is interesting from a uniqueness point of view, but probably isn't worth it unless the art style and morphing premise really appeal to you. Regrettably, they are about all the game has to offer.My experiences with the 360, even disappointing moments with Kameo, have been overwhelmingly positive. Even while falling to my death because of a wonky camera in Kameo or getting eaten for the fifth time by a giant centipede in King Kong, there's a level of polish to these launch titles that surprised me. I'm not sure I'd agree with J. Allard when he claimed the 360 has the 'best launch lineup ever', but at least the titles that I chose to purchase all have elements worth exploring. The console itself has also surprised me. A slick interface and effortless simple online components make this the first box I've really enjoyed just futzing with. The Marketplace is a powerful selling point, and the games up for offer are well worth looking into. They're constantly adding content as well, ensuring that stopping in at the Live component is almost always a worthwhile sidetrip from whatever game you're playing. Just since the console's launch they've added a Mission Impossible 3 trailer, a Billiards game, and a great PSA from Red vs. Blue. I have been pleasantly surprised by the entire 360 experience, and I might even go so far as to say that I got my money's worth when I purchased the system last week. In these frustrating times of hype and shady customer service, it's hard for me to offer up higher praise than that.
As a final note, you may be interested to know that my Xbox Live GamerTag is 'whoisdialogue'. If you're looking for someone to kick around in CoD multiplayer, I will probably be able to oblige any deep-seated fantasies you may have of shooting a Slashdot editor in the brainpan. See you online.Update: 12/21 19:55 GMT by Z : Fixed per-point price, because math is hard. Thanks AC.
But.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:But.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:But.. (Score:3, Insightful)
According to this online polls Cowboy Neal has stolen over 10,000 consoles. It's an online poll, so it must be true. You think he's eBaying them?
Cowboy Neal Stole My Xbox [slashdot.org]
Same thing... (Score:2, Funny)
$0.80 a point? (Score:5, Informative)
Live is offering 1000 Points for $12.50 (or $.80 a point)
Shouldn't that be $0.0125 a point, or 4 points for a nickel?
Re:$0.80 a point? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:$0.80 a point? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:$0.80 a point? (Score:5, Funny)
Shhhhh!!!!! I've started selling him 2 points for $0.80 and he thinks he's getting a great deal. Don't blow this for me!
Re:$0.80 a point? (Score:3, Funny)
crashes? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:crashes? (Score:2)
Well, actually i did freeze in PGR 3 once but it was because my daughter was doing something she shouldn't have.
Re:crashes? (Score:3, Insightful)
Sticking paperclips in the ports ?
Re:crashes? (Score:3, Funny)
2 year olds are not good with consoles no matter what brand.
Re:crashes? (Score:2)
If you want to be sure you
Couldn't they take a few pointers from XBMC (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Couldn't they take a few pointers from XBMC (Score:5, Interesting)
The xbox 360 media playback is somewhere between pathetic and piss-poor. About the only thing they got right is allowing you to stream MP3's over the network to listen to them in game. I haven't been able to find a linux streaming server that will replicate the functionality of Media Connect so I can stream directly from my file server. Media Center coupled with the Xbox 360 will not playback MP3's in a samba share mounted as a drive. I had to copy my MP3 collection to my workstation and stream from that. Because of that, I haven't gotten the ambition to mirror my digital camera collection to my workstation for streaming.
There is NO video playback without XP Media Center, and I've heard it doesn't support that many formats anyway. I thought Microsoft would have taken a look at XBMC and stolen some of the best features. XBMC can playback media through a number of different formats (I believe nfs, samba, and stream servers) and copes with pretty much everything you throw at it at this point. XBMC can play an ISO of a DVD, fantastic.
Until the 360 can do at least what XBMC can do, it is both a joke and a failure. I really want to disconnect my original xbox, Microsoft needs to come through with a serious media player.
Re:Couldn't they take a few pointers from XBMC (Score:3, Informative)
By what measure, exactly? Tons of press, fairly good reviews on a relatively large launch library, sold out (well, we can blame that on limited hardware yields), it can play most formats people care about (MP3, unprotected AAC, MPEG2 and most graphic formats), overall well designed hardware and an intuitive
Amen (Score:3, Informative)
I'm used to large power supplies, my LCD tv has one thats the same size if not bigger, so welcome to the world of big bricks
Avoiding Thug Companies (Score:2)
Microsoft, both XBox and Windows PCs
Nintendo, they strong arm their suppliers and developers
Sony, they make everything proprietary and tie developers into exclusive releases to limit customer choice, and they are going to be putting the customer-unfriendly Blu-Ray into the PS3.
EA, the biggest publisher is notorious for overworking their employees, and just did the very anti-competitive exclusive contracts with the NFL, ESPN and NHL. They don't even want to use the ESPN brand, t
Re:Avoiding Thug Companies (Score:2)
Tyrannosaurus Rex (Score:2, Funny)
I know, Google Images shouldn't be a reference, but anyway...
Re:Tyrannosaurus Rex (Score:2)
Re:Tyrannosaurus Rex (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Tyrannosaurus Rex (Score:5, Funny)
(Fantasy!)
Re:Tyrannosaurus Rex (Score:3, Interesting)
I need to get out more.
Yeah but.... (Score:5, Funny)
I still think sniping you through the office window would be easier than getting an Xbox 360 right now however.
Re:Yeah but.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yeah but.... (Score:5, Funny)
Now it all makes sense... (Score:2)
Re:Now it all makes sense... (Score:2)
Life or dupe situation, eh?
Keyboard Input (Score:5, Informative)
Disclaimer: Microsoft is my employer. This post is provided as-is with no warranty and confers no rights.
Re:Keyboard Input (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Keyboard Input (Score:2)
Must the user be hand-held every step of the way now?
Re:Keyboard Input (Score:2)
No, I don't generally read the manual unless I have to - but if I later discover that things would have been easier for me if I had, I don't blame the manufacturer, I blame myself for being too impatient and arrogant.
Re:Keyboard Input (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Keyboard Input (Score:2)
It's a console, not a PC. Play it like one.
Re:Keyboard Input (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, it's a shame that the Gran Turismo series sells so poorly... and all due to the fact that people playing with a wheel and pedals are able to compete at a higher level. Forza didn't sell all that well either. Both of those titles are extremely well selling titles for their respective systems and both can be played at a different level with an expensive add on. Play GT4 with a
Good Writeup (Score:5, Funny)
I told my son that we're not getting a new console until at least one of us finishes all the games we own. That should keep us busy until the PS4 or xbox 720 hit.
one of us finishes all the games we own (Score:2)
Re:one of us finishes all the games we own (Score:2)
Why do you say that? Do all the games you own erase their own save files just before you complete them?
Re:one of us finishes all the games we own (Score:2)
Re:one of us finishes all the games we own (Score:2)
Re:Good Writeup (Score:3, Interesting)
As a confirmed video game junkie I have mixed feelings toward the "next generation" consoles. I don't think that we've really maxed out the current generation yet, especially the xbox, but now we're moving on. The 360 is at a price point that makes it easier for me to Just Say No, at least for now.
Heh. Yeah, I only got an Xbox after they were $150 and I spent a lot of time rationalizing that it was OK to buy a Microsoft thing. I eventually came up with the dissembling cognitive dissonance-resolver tha
Re:Good Writeup (Score:2)
Sounds ok... (Score:4, Interesting)
And what I want to know is... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:And what I want to know is... (Score:5, Informative)
I will say, the power brick gets pretty hot. If it was just lying on the carpet, I may have the same heating problems others have reported. By putting it on the open wire mesh of my entertainment unit, I have a lot of air moving over it. So far I haven't had so much as a stutter or slowdown.
Re:And what I want to know is... (Score:2)
Re:And what I want to know is... (Score:2)
Gamertag (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Gamertag (Score:3, Funny)
Whither Marketplace? (Score:5, Interesting)
So the question is, how much of a value is the X360 if I really couldn't care less about the Live Marketplace? Is it intrinsic to the value of the box or is it a nice add-on? I'm waiting to see what the PS3 can do either way, but if Marketplace is Xbox's 'edge' then its kind of boring. (I have no doubt I will be able to voice-chat and do multiplayer/internet on the Revolution and PS3.)
Re:Whither Marketplace? (Score:2)
But in other ways, the Xbox 360 arcade part of it is a very, very good thing. If you like arcade games, it might be nice to have things be revamped in high-def with a wireless controller. But more importantly, for the first time, it provides smaller companies an outlet to console gaming. Previously, only well-funded companies that could afford to spend the tim
Re:Whither Marketplace? (Score:4, Insightful)
Here's the thing. It has to do with Passport, and what MS intends you to use the Xbox360 for.
Theoretically (because this does not really mimic my own life): I spend a lot of time in the living room. I have a shiny new X360. I use it for all the frills; media streaming, most of my game playing (including my audio dialog with other players and friends), watching DVDs, listening to music. All that celestial jukebox stuff. I sign into this thing with my Passport, so they know exactly who I am. And it is connected via a (mandatory) broadband link, pretty much doing as it pleases as far as connecting to the network.
Y'see where I'm going with this? A fairly complete little snapshot of my demographic tastes in software and media. And I'm continually reporting this information to Microsoft.
So yeah, frightened is an understatement. Even if they did not use this very valuable information for nefarious purposes I hardly trust them to even lock it up properly.
I'd be completely cool with everything Live is about if I didn't have to give it my name. But I do, so no go.
I *gasp* Like the 360 I think.... (Score:3, Informative)
In all fairness (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:In all fairness (Score:2, Informative)
Re:In all fairness (Score:3, Insightful)
They copied 77 games onto harddrives; just because they didn't actually go into Target and take 77 cases from the shelves doesn't stop it from being some sort of theft.
Re:In all fairness (Score:4, Informative)
They copied 77 games onto harddrives; just because they didn't actually go into Target and take 77 cases from the shelves doesn't stop it from being some sort of theft.
But it does, because theft is about what one looses, not by what one gains. The loss of a sale ... sure ... but that's not a theft in the slightest.
Re:In all fairness (Score:2)
Or is it that the taking of money from microsoft isn't stealing because they are a large corperation that nobody likes anyway?
This whole line of argument is useless. Wether it is games, or music or what ever. You cannot say that you aren't stealing, because you are. You are depriving the right holders money, and that is the same as stealing m
Re:In all fairness (Score:3, Informative)
Exactly. For example, if my boss makes me work late, and a restaurant at which I had planned to eat dinner is closed, it's not theft. "Theft [m-w.com]" and "steal [m-w.com]" have very precise definitions that involve the taking propery that also deprives someone of that property.
You cannot say that you aren't stealing, because you are. You are depriving the right holders money, and that is the same as stealing money from them.
Intellectual property crimes are illegal, and they may or m
Re:In all fairness (Score:2)
If you want to argue that copying isn't theft, you also have to agree that any idea you have should be shared for everyone because it isn't theft even if the act of sharing it strips you of the ability to profit from that idea, no matter how brilliant or cool.
According to the prevalent beliefs of the society at large, these men did something wrong. You may disagree, but that is your right. Just like if I took your cre
Re:In all fairness (Score:2)
Couldn't you make a similar argument about plain old fraud though? To me copying and selling a console or its software is effectively fraud.
Having said that I do not like the idea of jail for any non-violent crime whatsoever. Unfortunately, I would have trouble backing that up with a solid argument.
Re:In all fairness (Score:2)
I won't be losing any sleep over some idiots pirating 70 games at a time per console.
Well you should be, because all they did is copy some stuff for their customers - hardly fellony class material. Perhaps calling it "piracy", like they would board ships and attack people makes it seem like they are worse than they really are. I don't know.
All they asked for... (Score:3, Insightful)
I stopped reading (and purchasing) at this point...
Re:All they asked for... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:All they asked for... (Score:2)
Generic subject (Score:3, Funny)
So where's the negative?
Visualizer (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What if you don't want Live? (Score:3, Interesting)
What I'm interested in is: if you don't want (or can't access) Live, then is it even worth getting a 360 at all? From TFA, the whole 360 experience seems to be focused on Live from the first time you power up, right down to needing a Passport account. Frankly, I have zero interest in playing against other people online, or buying skins, or getting Gamer Tags or custom icons, or any of that. But since the games appear to revolve around exactly that kind of thing on Live, would it basically mean throwing money away on a game that I'd never see half of?
Re:What if you don't want Live? (Score:2)
While it may seem like the focus is on Live, it's not a REQUIREMENT. Live (Gold membership) will track your achievements and show associated bling no your gamercard. You also need Gold to play online against other players. Beyond that, it's not going to get you anything for games that you will only be playing the single player content.
In short, they've made it a centerpiece for the console experience as a whole, but
Must be nice to be young and free (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't get married.
Re:Must be nice to be young and free (Score:5, Funny)
Now that i've been married a few years, i spend very little time thinking "man, i wish i had more time to play Doom 3"
Re:Must be nice to be young and free (Score:3, Insightful)
Note the careful wording of my original statement. It's not the absolute frequency, its the frequency of scoring divided by the frequency of desire. So long as desire goes down at the same rate as the scoring, its no big deal
In all fairness (Score:2, Insightful)
-g.
The cost of Xbox Live (Score:4, Insightful)
So why is it that people don't even bring up the fact that it costs $20/mo additional to any media costs, hardware costs, and even connection costs just to use Xbox Live?
Re:The cost of Xbox Live (Score:4, Informative)
You can pay for Xbox LIVE subscriptions in various ways, but the gold subscription is the most economical.
Disclaimer: Microsoft is my employer. This post is provided as-is with no warranties and confers no rights.
wrong terminology... (Score:4, Informative)
Live Gold is not free, just making J Allard's comments technically correct but completely misleading. Anyone hearing the comments would assume that the thing that came free would do what Live allowed you to do, which is play against others online.
A $50 12 month (actually 13) Gold subscription card is the cheapest way to get Live Gold on 360. There are also 3 month Live Gold subscription cards too, I think they are $20, making it $80/year. You can also get Live Gold month to month, but I think it is $10/mo or some other nonsensical cost.
Networking Mandatory? (Score:5, Funny)
/just not gonna do it.
Re:What the hell? (Score:2)
As I said, all the demos offer a free trial version, so you can try before you buy. They're usually fixed time, so you can only play for about half an hour or so before it quits. The themes and gamer pictures are usually for-pay, but there are a number of freebies as well. For example, right now you can download a Kameo Christmas-themed skin for your blades. It's not as attractive as some of the ot
Re:What the hell? (Score:3, Informative)
Thats a bit of an exageration. I believe you just pay and you can get some new stuff but you dont have to pay to keep switching around things. Kind of like the important part of the look of the 360 is to be able to move it to anywhere in your lounge, thats obviously free, but if you really like you can also change its face plate for a price.
Its just an extra that wouldnt exist at all if it werent for the credit card and point stuff.
That said I am also wai
Re:What the hell? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What the hell? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What the hell? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What the hell? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What the hell? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:let me know when (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah. It sucks how you have to throw away your PS2 when you buy an Xbox 360. I never understood why we aren't allowed to keep our old consoles so we can play our old games, while still having a new console to play new games on.
Oh. Wait.
Re:Console vs PC (Score:2)
You are correcct that th
Re:Console vs PC (Score:4, Insightful)
And since all future big name title development will be based on capabilities of PS3 and/or Xbox360, its pretty easy to see the game engines being multithreaded. Multi core CPUs are 'free' extra performance as long as the engine is developed as multithreaded.
Consoles are fine for some game types, but as long as they don't have a keyboard (and good MMOs), there's always room for PCs. You also won't see complex strategy titles on consoles, and FPS without mouse aiming will just never work. Halo is just the exception that proves the point.
If I want to have a quick spin on arcade driving game, console is a great thing to have for that.
I'd never play a FPS or strategy game, or anything requiring typing on a console.
Different tool for a different job. Both have their place. However, if you can afford just one thing, PC is more of a multipurpose tool, and if you are going to buy a good PC for work/'production use', the required addon of a 300-400$ videocard on top of the otherwise pretty standard PC is no different than the price of a console system.
Disclaimer: I have one decked out game PC, one midrange game/utility PC, PS2 and half dozen older consoles. Never touched Xbox (not enough exclusive titles I couldn't play on PS2 or PC), undecided on XBox 360 and/or PS3 - I can wait until next autumn as Xbox360 currently has no must-have exclusive title. I can play CoD2 or King Kong also on my PC, and I like the 1600x1200 res better.
Re:Console vs PC (Score:2)
I sincerely hope PS3 games won't be so horribly overpriced. 50 euros for normal title, 60 euros for exceptional uber hit is already pushing
Re:Console vs PC (Score:4, Interesting)
The system might be excellent but from what I've seen, the games that are *currently* out there just don't make it worthwhile to stand in line for hours on end (especially here in Minnesota where it's cold).
From what I have seen (based on the various displays in and around my home area), if it's not being displayed on a huge HD monitor, the graphics just aren't all that much different from what we've seen in the XBox 1 or the PS2. I personally don't know a single person with an HD monitor, nevermind one that's as large as those they display the 360 on in the stores. I know I will never have an HD monitor in my home so I'm not sure what benefit the 360 has for most people RIGHT now to stand in those long lines other than MS-funded and media-created hype.
Re:Console vs PC (Score:2)
I live on the East Side of Seattle, and know very few people that do _NOT_ have HD televisions or displays.
To these people, the 360 (and the PS3) present compelling enough visual improvements to make them worth while.
HD Sets are falling in price rapidly, and will be the norm for American homes sooner than later. That is why the console makers are embracing it.
Re:Console vs PC (Score:2)
The graphics card appears to be a slightly boosted Radeon X1800, and can be expected to be beaten by top of the range PC cards in another 3-4 months. As for games using all three processors, not the launch games according to:
http://www.jo [joystiq.com]
Re:Console vs PC (Score:2)
So I am doubtfull if it can be matched. Maybe the pc is just not a good gaming platform as it once was. Maybe Windows just sucks the performance out of gaming
MOD PARENT UP (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm just sayin, is all!
Re:What the fuck is this again? (Score:3, Insightful)
waste of text
Re:What the fuck is this again? (Score:2)
Re:Guy Wastes Money On Crappy Console. (Score:2)
Re:Is this real or an advertisement? (Score:2, Informative)
If it was an advert, the math wouldn't have been wrong. Also, he wouldn't have mentioned the negatives, such as the 32-character e-mail address, and the power brick. Or even the King Kong lighting issues.
Regarding the "large and risky investment": I think that was the part that the whole "meant-to-imply-an-in-drawn-breath dept" was referring to.
Where did it say he bought all games available? As far as I can remember, he said he only bought 3 games: King Kong, Call of Duty