Oh.

On a more serious note, anyone recall which must-have 360 games were out in its first 3-6 months? I didn't pay attention to anything in its library for the first year so I only know what's out now.
Moderator: Thanas
The ones I'd consider must have are Project Gotham 3, Condemned, Dead or Alive 4, Call of Duty 2. Bubbling under as worth buying but not must buy are Kameo, Perfect Dark Zero, Quake 4, Ridge Racer 6, King Kong, and Fight Night Round 3.Utsanomiko wrote: On a more serious note, anyone recall which must-have 360 games were out in its first 3-6 months? I didn't pay attention to anything in its library for the first year so I only know what's out now.
A little nit-picky, but the Wii version also has 16x9 widescreen support- not exactly re-inventing the wheel but they at least took some advantage of the Wii's superior graphic ability. However, that comes at the cost of free camera control with the C Stick. I'm still weighing the pros and cons of that, because that was one thing Wind Waker did very well.Face it, Zelda is nothing more than a Gamecube game with some buttons remapped. But for some reason, people still hail Zelda as 'a traditional game done right'. Bah. Had it not had the strength of the Zelda franchise behind it, Twilight Princess would have been yet another lazy last-generation port.
Given that the only Wii game I care about is available for their previous system with no disadvantages, to me the Wii launch library has just as much appeal as the PS3 one - none.Utsanomiko wrote:Well at least Sony made the smart move by making sure the PS3 had such a great launch library compared to the Wii...
It's so wierd to see a list of such bog-standard games as 'must haves'. Thre are some good games on 360, but none of them were launch titles (in my opinion, the launch array was uninspired and I've never heard anyone say anything good about PDZ). It's worth pointing out that if you're after Fighting Game 87 or Driving Game Victory, the 360 is the obvious choice, and certainly not a Wii.Vendetta wrote:The ones I'd consider must have are Project Gotham 3, Condemned, Dead or Alive 4, Call of Duty 2. Bubbling under as worth buying but not must buy are Kameo, Perfect Dark Zero, Quake 4, Ridge Racer 6, King Kong, and Fight Night Round 3.
The latest one of those was out in February '06 (FNR3), Most were out by January, and the lowest rated of them has an average 74 score on Metacritic.
Spanky The Dolphin wrote: That doesn't make Sephirius any less of an idiot, of course...
Actually, many news networks (City TV in Toronto included) still use Digital Betamax for their field cameras.KrauserKrauser wrote:Just like beta-max.Sephirius wrote:protip: buy a ps3. blu-ray will take over anyway.
Beta-max Forever!
You said this:Sephirius wrote:Spanky The Dolphin wrote: That doesn't make Sephirius any less of an idiot, of course...what'd I do to deserve that Spanky
Sephirius wrote:protip: buy a ps3. blu-ray will take over anyway.
That's what I was thinking. I wanted examples of essential games in the first couple months like (Dead Rising and Gears of War are about all that's fully on my radar and future list), but instead got some sort of unrelateble moon-man response that validated my 5-going-on-7 Wii game purchases.Stark wrote:
It's so wierd to see a list of such bog-standard games as 'must haves'. Thre are some good games on 360, but none of them were launch titles (in my opinion, the launch array was uninspired and I've never heard anyone say anything good about PDZ). It's worth pointing out that if you're after Fighting Game 87 or Driving Game Victory, the 360 is the obvious choice, and certainly not a Wii.
It may seem weird initially, but look at what people actually buy. Really actually innovative titles that are genuinely stunning and great tend to be bought by two guys and a dog. Pokemon Puce and Grand Theft Auto Your Backyard sell ten mil without effort.Stark wrote: It's so wierd to see a list of such bog-standard games as 'must haves'. Thre are some good games on 360, but none of them were launch titles (in my opinion, the launch array was uninspired and I've never heard anyone say anything good about PDZ). It's worth pointing out that if you're after Fighting Game 87 or Driving Game Victory, the 360 is the obvious choice, and certainly not a Wii.
Oh I'm not arguing that their unpopular or unpolished or whatever, simply that it's odd for an array of cutout games (even what, three driving games?) as 'must haves'. But then I'm still slowly creeping towards getting a 360 for a couple of interesting games, rather than the huge pile of uninspired rubbish, so...Vendetta wrote:It may seem weird initially, but look at what people actually buy. Really actually innovative titles that are genuinely stunning and great tend to be bought by two guys and a dog. Pokemon Puce and Grand Theft Auto Your Backyard sell ten mil without effort.
This is because the bog standard games are largely ones that can be played by absolutely anyone with pretty much the same expectation of enjoyment from them.
but... it's the better format D:Spanky The Dolphin wrote:You said this:Sephirius wrote:Spanky The Dolphin wrote: That doesn't make Sephirius any less of an idiot, of course...what'd I do to deserve that Spanky
Sephirius wrote:protip: buy a ps3. blu-ray will take over anyway.
Even if blu-ray does win out, his 'recommendation' is like telling people to buy a Action Max because it relies upon a successful media format.Ace Pace wrote:Hasn't this been done to death?Sephirius wrote:
but... it's the better format D:
stupid consumers
Betamax, look it up.
The winner will be whichever format gets a player priced at $100 or less first (extra points for backwards compatibility with DVD), that's the only thing that will get the general public to consider either of them over a $50 DVD player sitting right besides them, the PS3 and a few audio and video philes that make up a market probably smaller than what's left of VHS are inconsequential against such a big standard as DVD.DaveJB wrote:That's likely due to it receiving a brief boost from the PS3's launch. If PS3 owners keep buying the discs, then yeah, it'll probably be game over for HD-DVD. If not, then it could still be anyone's game (though whether either side will achieve a victory that's worth bragging about is a different matter entirely...)
It's not that odd. For the vast majority of people, those are the actual "must have" titles, It doesn't matter that they have played something like them before, in fact, the sense of familiarity is part of what they're buying when they buy those games. Additionally, all the games I listed are good examples of their respective genres.Stark wrote:Oh I'm not arguing that their unpopular or unpolished or whatever, simply that it's odd for an array of cutout games (even what, three driving games?) as 'must haves'.
Not necessarily true.Vendetta wrote:(By the way, I agree that individual review scores are useless, which is why I look at metacritic and gamerankings, because they present an average of all scores, which filters out individual bullshit and poor editorial control, which creeps in especially in online publications)
While I can agree with familiarity (after all, I once owned Dynasty Warriors 2-5Vendetta wrote:It's not that odd. For the vast majority of people, those are the actual "must have" titles, It doesn't matter that they have played something like them before, in fact, the sense of familiarity is part of what they're buying when they buy those games. Additionally, all the games I listed are good examples of their respective genres.
How is that a problem? *Any* aggregator will be skewed when there are only 2 or 3 reviews counted. If you're talking about Sonic and the Secret Rings, 6 of the 9 reviews are in the 69-76 range, so it's now pretty easy to guess the overall quality.DPDarkPrimus wrote:Not necessarily true.Vendetta wrote:(By the way, I agree that individual review scores are useless, which is why I look at metacritic and gamerankings, because they present an average of all scores, which filters out individual bullshit and poor editorial control, which creeps in especially in online publications)
One shit review by an idiot over on IGN brought down the score of the Sonic Wii game from an average of ~95% to 80%.
You can't record to a Laserdisc, though. I think even if LD was more affordable, people would have gravitated to buying a tape deck over buying an LD deck, because a lot of people recorded TV shows on tape. Further, while LD was technically superior, although a lot of people didn't have a setup good enough for it to really make a difference.Shogoki wrote:Technical superiority means shit, look at Beta and Laserdisc, it all boils down to who makes the players more afordable and readily available first.Sephirius wrote: but... it's the better format D:
stupid consumers
Like i said in my first post, the only way either format can stand a chance of winning the "format war" (more like a small skirmish so far) is if they release a $100 or under, backwards compatible, player, otherwise they don't stand a snowball's chance in hell against DVD.Uraniun235 wrote: You can't record to a Laserdisc, though. I think even if LD was more affordable, people would have gravitated to buying a tape deck over buying an LD deck, because a lot of people recorded TV shows on tape. Further, while LD was technically superior, although a lot of people didn't have a setup good enough for it to really make a difference.
Similarly, a lot of people still have 480i TV sets, so they're not even getting the full benefit of a lot of DVD titles, let alone being able to notice any difference between DVD and HD-DVD/Blu-ray. Hence why I think either HD-DVD/Blu-Ray is destined to become the next LaserDisc.