4 posts tagged “video games”
What websites do you visit every day?
Submitted by Chez Michelle.
I'm an avid gamer, techie and current-affairs junkie so I check...
- The Gamercast Network - website for a series of podcasts and a brilliant good-natured forum as well.
- Eurogamer - great news site for games and a rare gem of European based news.
- BBC News - my absolute favourite news channel and website.
- Digg - a superb social news site, excellent for highlighting the quirkier stories as well as good solid tech news.
- Xbox.com - I have a 360 but don't use it every day, I visit the site to see who's online, read my messages and send messages to my friends.
That's all folks.
I know it's cheesy but I thought I'd do a little roundup of 2006 and then later on a series of predictions for 2007. The lists are all Top Fives and are based on techie stuff unless otherwise stated.
- Podcasting
I had a look in 2005 and there really wasn't any great content out there, I came back in 2006 and it was like the whole 'industry' had exploded with some well established shows as well as some new favourites, this was really the year the podcasting became established. - Video Gaming
With the Xbox 360 released in December 2005 (but generally available March 2006) and the December launch of the Wii and the PS3 (US only) this really has been the year for gaming. More than that Nintendo have performed an amazing feat by pulling games out of Geekdom and into popular culture, not only with the Wii but with this year's release of the DS Lite and the wonderful Brain Training. - Beta Releases
I'm not sure what's happened but in 2006 nobody wants to release a product without having a public Beta, this has been true for games (Phantasy Star Universe + Final Fantasy XI on the Xbox 360), PC software (Office 2007, Windows Vista) and everything regarded as Web 2.0. - Video & Broadcasting
This year has seen a fundamental change in the way people watch and interact with video, of course nobody missed the popularity of YouTube and its acquisition by Google for $1.65bn but the I find the complementary changes in the broadcast industry to be even more interesting. Many major players have been trying to get into the User Generated Content (UGC) market ranging from pointless attempts by people who just don't get it (MTV Flux) to well-done but still distinctly old-media (BBC's Your News). - High Definition
In 2006 we saw the launch of both HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, heralding a new era of home cinema - let's just hope that one of the two competing formats wins sooner rather than later so consumers can buy with confidence. 2006 also saw the introduction of Sky's High Definition Satellite service, sadly it was over-priced, delivered late and has limited quantities of genuine HD content. This year also seems to be the year that people started to buy HD TVs in great quantities, at the end of 2005 I didn't know anybody with an HD TV, now over half of my friends either own or are seriously considering an HD TV and the prices still keep on tumbling.
Well, I'm convinced I've missed something but that'll have to do, I think I'll go to bed now and hopefully dream of 2007, if I do then you'll have my predictions tomorrow!
Like all good stories mine starts off happy, turns sad, gets happier and points towards a brighter future. Like all good stories turned into Hollywood movies my story is also overly-dramatic and probably not worth watching, but watch anyway - you always do.
I pre-ordered my Wii back months ago, from the moment the new controller was unveiled I knew I had to have one. When it got closer to launch day I booked the day off of work and confirmed with Gamestation that my order would be fulfilled, it would - all things set for happiness. Unfortunately something came up at work so I had to work on Friday but I still collected it at midnight and played Wii Sports for about an hour. Then, that weekend and the following week I was working / sleeping / Christmas shopping / socialising and didn't really get the chance to play it (see this is the sad bit). This weekend just gone though, I got to play a little Red Steel, a little Zelda and a bit of Wii Sports and some Virtual Console games and I'm very pleased with the outcome. In brief...
Wii Sports
Very fun, quite tiring but pretty hilarious in two-player. My flatmate
(a girl) an I played it for a while and the split screen mode is great
fun, we got a few volleys going in Tennis and once you get the hang of
it you can really control what's going on.
Red Steel
It's OK, because it's not cartooney the low-res graphics on the Wii
really show themselves up and I did for a few seconds think "what have
I done?", but I persevered and, well - it's OK. I've not got to the
sword-fighting bit yet but I do like the novelties, such as that to
reload you just shake the Nun-Chuk downwards and to open a door you
shake it upwards. Overall though it didn't feel that responsive and
the general sentiment of 6/10 - 7/10 is pretty justified.
Zelda Twilight Princess
My name is thirtyfootscrew, and I have never played a Zelda game
before. Phew, that was hard to admit but now I've done it I feel like
a weight has been lifted from my shoulders. It's also a lie because
now I have played Twilight Princess (though it really is the first
Zelda I've ever played) and it seems quite good. I won't judge the
game on half-an-hour's play as it's not fair for such a big game but
first impressions are good, I shall report back sometime in the
future.
Virtual Console
I like it, though I have no real concept of what these Wii points are
worth so I can't comment on the value for money - I just went on a
mini-spending spree. I loved playing Golden Axe and Columns, Mario
Bros is rubbish (remember - this isn't Super Mario Bros) and I've not
really played Mario 64 enough to comment. The system all in all is
easy to use though no better ordered than Xbox Live Arcade so will be a
nightmare when it has lots of content, even though I don't have kids I
was pleased that it has ratings info for each game as it'll help
parents (something I think is good for the industry even though I'm
generally anti-censorship).
General 'ness'
I love it, I think it's fantastic - tonight I was more excited than
I have been in years about a console - I came home and it was glowing
blue. I opened up the Wii Menu (basically the Wii's OS) and found that
I'd received a message from Nintendo telling me that the Forecast
Channel was available. I downloaded the update and launched the
channel, a brief setup tells it where you live (or nearest large town)
and got stuck in, at a basic level it gives you current, 6-hour, next
day and 5-day weather forecasts which seems like all you'd need. Of course, Nintendo didn't stop there - you can zoom in and out, check other towns in the country by 'grabbing' the earth (zoom out enough and it is a globe), or towns in other countries.
I spent about half an hour checking weather in places like Cape Town, Baghdad, Sidney, Sri-Lanka, New York - it was great. I know this sounds trivial but the user-experience of just 'grabbing' the world and shifting it around really made me see what could be possible with the Wii - I believe that this is the first mass-market step in a new model of human-computer interaction and it really works. I have friends who would never consider playing on the Xbox 360 that say "that sounds fun, I'll have to come round and try it", my female (non-gaming) flat-mate bought herself a controller and spent an hour playing Wii Sports with one of her female non-gaming friends. Stuff like that just doesn't happen, at least it didn't used to - things are changing.
The one last thing I like is that whatever you're doing it always plays soothing music to you and makes nice comforting noises when you click on things, it reminds me of the Heart of Gold from the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - except less irritating, I think that might might make both Xbox360 and PS3 the Paranoid Androids.
MicroSony 0 - 1 Nintendo
An away win is always so much sweeter.
For me this was quite a big news item, I got into the DreamStation.cc Video Game Show podcast earlier in the year and have been an avid listener since. The podcast basically covers news, opinion and humour from the world of videogaming and was very well produced/edited compared to many other podcasts - basically think TWiT for gamers.
Well, now the host of the show Chris Paladino has secured a job working for Microsoft's gaming community site Gamerscore Blog working in the community - a dream come true more-or-less. The rest of the crew have created a new podcasting network Gamercast Network to bring together a range of independent gaming podcasts, this could be good for gamers in general so watch this space.
As for DreamStation.cc, they're continuing to podcast and will grow into their own style once more, I will definitely keep on listening and using the forums, if you've never tried I reccommend you have a look.
