Pint-Sized Playability

August 24th, 2009

OK, one more brief thought on Shadow Complex while I’m on the subject: one of the most common recurring themes in game reviews for the title is that SC represents a “great value” because it includes a full-sized game in an Xbox Live release.  The thought occurs to me, however, that this might not be a good thing for developers.

The basic problem, as I see it, is that if Xbox Live simply becomes an arena for discounted AAA titles, it hurts everybody.  Developers will be forced into an arms race to produce cheaper but high-quality games, essentially lowering the starting price point for new games and squeezing their profitability.  Gamers who, like Michael Abbott, are drawn to “bursts of [streamlined] fun,” will have a harder time finding the more casual titles they treasure, because they’ll be sandwiched in between more premium titles.  And hardware manufacturers, who responded to this issue first with the Wii and Live/PSN, will find themselves in much the same predicament as they did before the current generation.

I’m hardly one to bemoan getting more for less.  But I do become concerned that the more we blur the lines between the delivery of AAA or hardcore games and casual titles, the more we actually end up hurting ourselves.  Definitely think of this more as a thought experiment if this trend were carried to an extreme, rather than a complaint about Shadow Complex, which I like quite a bit: is it possible that segregating our games by type and channel is actually beneficial?

Posted in Business, DLC, Geoff, Microsoft, Mobile, PSN, Wii, Xbox Live | 3 Comments »



Money can be exchanged for goods and services

October 8th, 2008

Attention game industry, we already have a standard for which we can purchase items: money.  Let’s use it, shall we?

Obviously, we all know about Xbox Live Points, which inexplicably have a conversion rate of 80 points to every $1.  There’s just no reason to have such a stupid conversion rate except to slightly obscure the true price of downloadable items.

Nintendo/Wii Points are slightly better, but only because they have a sensible conversion rate of 100 points to every $1.  At least when you buy something there’s not a weird conversion that you have to pull off in your head to figure out how much it is.  Now we learn, however, that instead of just using the same pool of Nintendo points for DSi downloads, you will have to keep completely separate accounts for both.

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Posted in Idiocy, Jeff, Online, PSN, Virtual Console, Wii, Xbox Live | 3 Comments »



Mega Man 9 - Thoughts On Difficulty And Irony

October 3rd, 2008

So far, I’m very much enjoying Mega Man 9, but whether or not you will is dependent very much on two related but ultimately different things: how much you liked the original NES Mega Man games, how you feel about the NES aesthetic itself.

Let me elaborate.  With respect to the original MM series, it probably goes without saying that if you really hated the originals, you’re not going to like #9…  it imitates the originals almost to a fault.  You have essentially the same basic puzzle themes - disappearing or moving blocks, instant-kill spikes, hard-hat enemies, middle-stage mini-bosses, and so on.  The game does manage to come up with some unique uses for these building blocks but since the point is to reflect the earlier titles it doesn’t make the differences too obvious.  And you can’t really fault it for that.

It’s on the second point that I think you need to draw some careful distinctions.  In an earlier comment, Rob remarks that “we started doing much better once we started assuming that, at any given moment, the worst possible thing that could happen was going to happen.”  This is a very on-target comment.  A lot of people have discussed the game’s difficulty - in many respects, I don’t think that it’s actually as hard as they imply if you’re familiar with older NES games.  But the game doesn’t simply attempt to replicate that aesthetic - it tries to pay tribute to it.  The practical implication is that what was tough in Mega Man 1 or 2 is fetishized in Mega Man 9. 

For example, if you recall the original Ice Man stage in #1, you may recall how irritating the disappearing ice blocks could be; it was simply tough to get your character to make the leaps as carefully as you desired to avoid a bottomless pit of death.  The Gravity Man stage has similar pits, but puts an enemy in front of them that launches you inexorably into the pits - or in some places, spiked walls.  There’s no way to know the enemies are there unless you inch forward, bit by bit (or die repeatedly), any time you come close to a pit or spike series, as Rob implies.  This is a perfect example of what I think ultimately will divide the Mega Man 9 haters from the fans.  If you liked Mega Man because it was hard… you will love this game.  If you like it because you really love the aesthetic (art, level design, conventions) of the original NES titles, you will still like the game quite a bit.  (I fall into the last category.)  That’s because it takes what was difficult about the original Mega Man, puts it on a billboard, and strings it with neon so you don’t miss it; it’s retro for retro’s sake, an ironic take on all that was good and bad about NES games. 

That’s why liking Mega Man itself is only partially relevant.  The critical second hurdle is your feelings about that kind of take on gaming.  If you like the sense of irony being displayed, that’s a good sign.  If you don’t, you probably won’t play too long.

Posted in Geoff, Nintendo, PSN, Wii, Xbox Live | No Comments »



Downloadable Renaissance

August 13th, 2008

What’s going on this month?  Within just the span of a few weeks we get:

  • Geometry Wars 2 (XBLA)
  • Pixeljunk Eden (PSN)
  • Braid (XBLA)
  • Bionic Commando: Rearmed (XBLA/PSN)
  • Ratchet and Clank: Quest for Booty (PSN)
  • Castle Crashers (XBLA)

Geometry Wars 2 and Braid are not just some of the best downloadable games I’ve played, they’re some of the best games overall that I’ve played all year.  I loved the demo for Eden, but haven’t had a chance to purchase the whole game yet in the midst of the other great releases.  IGN has already reviewed Bionic Commando: Rearmed, and while one review does not a game make (nor do several reviews sometimes), they say it’s the best downloadable game made so far.  Certainly, Castle Crashers has been highly anticipated for quite awhile and R&C: QfB looks as high-quality as any previous title in the series.

Obviously, there are still some differences of what can really be done with a high-profile, big-budget game and the typically smaller-budget downloadable titles, but with games like Ratchet and Clank: Quest for Booty coming out, even that line is starting to blur.  There’s no question about it, this is a great slate of games.

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Posted in Jeff, Online, PSN, Xbox Live | 2 Comments »