Thursday, September 15, 2005

Pictures Are Up

Check out my TGS05 photo album. I have tons of Revolution controller pics! Way more than the ones on this page!

Final Pictures And Information



  • Nintendo showed a video designed to higlight the features of the controller. Footage offers viewers a view from inside a television looking out. See people playing the Revolution controller.
  • Footage shows them using the device in various ways. Playing instruments. Cutting sushi. Making Mario jump by tilting the controller up. Slashing a sword. Using the remote as a light gun. Performing surgery. It showed an older couple conducting a concert with two remotes. Gour girls catching bugs with remotes. Even showed a single person playing with two remotes.
  • Audience loved it.
  • No demos shown. However, Shigeru Miyamoto previewed tech demos to IGN behind-closed-doors. Read our full report on the front page.
  • Praise for Revolution controller from Hideo Kojima and Square Enix.

Demos Of The Controller Tested By 1Up

The Revolution Controller Demos: How It Works.
Alright, so enough about sticks and buttons and lights-how does this crazy new controller actually work with games? To answer that question, Nintendo's legendary game creator Shigeru Miyamoto (creator of Mario, Zelda, Donkey Kong, Pikmin, you name it) walked specially selected members of the press through a series of hands-on technology demos. These were not real Revolution games (all the names for the demos are ours)-they were super-simple, graphically crude offerings designed solely to show off different aspects of how the controller can work. Here's a rundown of what we saw, along with our thoughts on each:


DEMO: BLOCK BUSTER
A firing-range-like contest where two players compete to see who can shoot randomly appearing squares first. Aiming is done by pointing the controller itself at different points on screen, pulling the B trigger to fire.
IMPRESSIONS: A great demonstration of how intuitive the controller can be-pointing it to aim felt perfectly natural, right from the very first second, just like with a light gun. It always shot exactly where it felt like I was aiming, and was incredibly responsive to even slight wrist movements-I barely had to move my hand at all.

DEMO: GONE FISHIN'
Grab a pole and lower it into a 3D pond full of fish. Keep the line steady and when you feel a nibble from the rumble of the controller, pull it up quick!
IMPRESSIONS: An interesting showcase of the controller's 3D movement detection-you position the fishing pole above the pond by moving the controller forward or back, left or right in actual space, then lowered the hook by lowering the controller. It was a bit difficult to keep it steady in the water, but flipping the controller up when you got a bite, mimicking the motion of pulling up a fish in reel life, was a little thrill that just felt right.

DEMO: IRRITATING STICKS
Two players guide rotating sticks through a side-scrolling maze of tunnels and moving obstacles, gathering coins and avoiding touching the walls. (A lot like the PS1 game Irritating Stick, and exactly like the import-only GBA game Kuru Kuru Kururin.)
IMPRESSIONS: Another demo that needed no explanation, you just "got" it immediately-move the controller in whatever direction you want the stick to go. As a 2D game that requires exact movement (the caves get really narrow in parts), this one reinforced how precise and steady the controller's movement detection can be. Another interesting tidbit-if your controller fell outside the detection "box," the demo had an arrow pointing off the edge of the screen in that direction so you could get it back in the correct space.

DEMO: AIR HOCKEY
Exactly what it sounds like: Two players each control a flat stick on either side of a rink by moving around their controller, pushing a puck back and forth, trying to keep it out of the goal on their side.
IMPRESSIONS: A bit sloppy and more sluggish than the other demos, this one was supposed to show how you could put "english" on the puck by twisting the controller but in practice it didn't work as well as in other demos (and I'm not saying that just 'cause I kept scoring on my own goal...wait...OK, actually it is partially because of that.).

DEMO: BASKETBOWL
Two players drag or push a ball to their opponent's basket by making the ground under their controller-maneuvered cursor dip (by holding "B") or rise (by pressing "A").
IMPRESSIONS: This was oddly fun-you could try to move the ball by either making a hill next to it and pushing it along, or making an indentation for it to fall into, then using it to drag it across the court. When you got close to the basket, turning an indentation under the ball into a hill suddenly would fling it up into the air.

DEMO: WHERE'S WALDOASAUR
A simple demonstration of depth perception-the player searches for a particular pokemon on a giant map filled with the creatures (ala Where's Waldo), zooming in by pushing the controller towards the screen and zooming out by pulling away from it.
IMPRESSIONS: Nothing much to say here except that, as a Nintendo rep commented, you can see how this might be put to use for aiming a sniper rifle in a first-person shooter.

DEMO: PILOT WANGS
Manipulate a biplane through the air, trying to fly through rings scattered around the Isle Delfino hub world of Super Mario Sunshine.
IMPRESSIONS: This was about all the different ways the Revolution can detect tilting the controller. It was as if the controller was the airplane itself - as long as your movements weren't too sudden, the on-screen action would mimic your movements with very little lag time. After about a minute I was pulling dramatic dives and loop-de-loops, bullseye-ing plenty of rings.


DEMO: METROID PRIME-TIME
Nintendo saved the best for last. This was the first section of the GameCube game Metroid Prime 2: Echoes, retrofitted to be compatible with the Revolution controller and its analog add-on piece (the "Nunchaku" set-up mentioned earlier). As on the Cube the analog stick controls movement, but instead of holding down a button to look around, you simply point the other controller in the direction you want to aim.
IMPRESSIONS: At first, I was standing up and swinging my hand all around to aim - and my arms got really tired really quick. But once I sat down and relaxed, resting my hands on my legs as I would with a normal controller, everything clicked. It wasn't perfect yet - the Revolution controller functionality had just been added recently and wasn't bug tested or polished, so every so often the view would "spaz out" for a couple seconds - but it was enough to get me excited. As odd as it may look holding the two separate controller pieces, one in each hand, looking around felt incredibly natural, even more than my preferred PC-style keyboard-and-mouse setup. I have to wonder about precision and speed in multiplayer games, but for a more deliberate single-player game like Metroid Prime - and the series is already confirmed for an appearance on the Revolution - this setup already has huge potential.

More Pics


Another Pic

Better Picture!

FIRST PICTURE!

MORE CONTROLLER INFO!

  • Revolution controller looks like futuristic television remote.
  • Glossy white design.
  • Looks Apple iPod inspired.
  • Controller is held in one hand. Attachments in the other.
  • Attachments connect to the bottom of the controller. Iwata shows analog stick attachment.
  • Thinking about packing Revolution with the main controller and attachment, Iwata says.
  • Controller acts like a mouse in real-space 3D. Pefect for FPS games!
  • Future attachments planned.

SOUNDS AWESOME! We need pictures though!

Controller Revealed!

  • Iwata speaking about Revolution controller
  • Iwata unveils Revolution controller
  • IGN will post high-resolution pictures, hands on impressions, feature breakdowns, roundtables, and more at 7:50 PM -- fewer than 15 minutes.
We need pictures though! IGN better not be foolin us!

Nintenfo Wifi Info To Come


Giant Wi-Fi logo on screen in background. Iwata says he will reveal much more on next-generation Wi-Fi this October.

More On The Keynote

  • Nintendogs has topped one million units shipped in Japan already, according to Iwata.
  • 60% of Nintendogs buyers picked up the game with a DS, according to Club Nintendo statistics.
  • Iwata begins topic on how to build game population going forward.

Iwata's Keynote Starts!


So far we have two points of information:

Iwata says Nintendo has built a bigger game population in three ways: Famicom Mini (shows commercials). GB Micro. Promises more shipments next week. Then he mentioned it was Mario's Birthday week. Miyamoto stands up. Number three, Iwata says, is Nintendo DS.

Iwata mentions "touch generation" games such as Nintendogs and Brain Trainer.

Almost Time!

Be prepared! It's almost time!!!

Ok So Maybe It Wasn't The Last Controller Rumor




Another one has been found, and it looks very similar to the last picture I found. Main difference is that the buttons can pop up and have faceplates for different buttons. Not sure what to think. Maybe the real looking picture is a prototype? Who knows, I say wait until tonight.

One Last Revolution Controller Rumor


Well considering that tonight at 10:00pm ET we will know the Revolution's controller, this should be the last of the mockups. It looks kinda real though, although nothing special known of yet that would make this easy to play NES - N64 games.

Xbox 360 Gets A Date At TGS 2005


It is officially announced when Xbox 360 will be released. In the US it will be released on November 22nd, Europe will have it December 2nd, and Japan will have it December 10th.

The pricing for the US is already known, and for Europe it is practically identical. For Japan on the other hand, they have only one system to choose, which is basically equivalent to our souped up system, minus a headset. Although the first batch to be made will include a commemorative headset.

In Japan, there will be seven launch titles:
· Ridge Racer 6
· Frame City
· Dead or Alive 4
· Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter
· (eM)-eNCHANT-arM
· Tetris: The Grandmaster Ace
· Everyparty

Final Countdown To TGS 2005

Well everybody, today is the day! (Unless you are reading this as of the posting time on the west coast, haha) Approximately tonight at 9:00 pm (eastern time) is the start of the TGS 2005, and most importantly, the keynote that is to be delivered by Satoru Iwata. There is a high chance we will learn a lot of Nintendo Revolution information, so be sure to be here tonight!

Was The Revolution Menu System Shown Behind Closed Doors?



I recently found this photo on the Nintendo Forums, and unlike many, it looks pretty convincing. There really isn't much to say except of what you can see on it. If it's fake, that person went through too much trouble, or was very very bored, haha. Also note that you can see the image of a controller torward the bottom. Is this the elusive controller we've wanted to see for so long?
Google