they will think its cool then look at the 149.99 price tag and say "never mind"
dontshackzmii
Do not underestimate millions of parents willing to buy a Kinect, just because their screaming children want Skittles....
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they will think its cool then look at the 149.99 price tag and say "never mind"
dontshackzmii
Do not underestimate millions of parents willing to buy a Kinect, just because their screaming children want Skittles....
being an xbox 360 owner doesn't mean that you have to worship your own purchase. I own a 360, too, and don't dislike it, but it's incredibly absurd the fact that in 2010 drives still scratch discs. why not admit it? Recently I bought a Nokia smartphone and it had a protective film on the screen, to prevent it from scratches. but guess what? the film was full of lines and drawings that it made it difficult to read through it. So, I had to remove it and spend around 20$ for a pack full of transparent films for my nokia 5800. In the meantime accident happened and the screen got a little scratch on it. As much as I like Nokia, my fave phone company, I found that inconvenient very unfortunate and made me angry at myself and at Nokia, too, because that was very stupid of them.
if you guys keep protecting the companies and just accept passively everything, they'll feel justified in doing crappy things, but don't panic, they'll put a sticker with a warning and you'll be fine.
come on!!
aia89
The only time mine scratched a disc was when I moved it while it was on. I forgot I had the disc inside. I din't blame MS, just took the game in to get it replaced...
[QUOTE="SaucepanMan"]Based on what I've seen from comic jumper it looks super repetitivejg4xchampreally? buzzkill ;(
On the XBL video it shows that the game unlocks 2 new levels for 'Splosion Man
common sense is also equipping your piece of hardware with something that should be the norm by now. Yeah what the hell? People who are like "well don't juggle it and toss it into walls then you idiot"...I do not understand you. They market this thing as being able to stand on its side. It will stand in people's living rooms. Other products do not have this issue. Accidents are bound to happen. Especially now that they're marketing more intensely towards kids and encouraging casual audiences to jump and flail their limbs around.[QUOTE="Metroid_Other_M"][QUOTE="delta3074"]why should MS waste money on something that isn't a problem for people with common sense that know better than to move there console whilst it's on?InsaneBasura
This should not be a problem that exists at this point.
How many people are going to jump around 2 inches in front of it?
I think this thread just boils to haters coming up with another excuse to not buy a 360. I don't think I'll buy a PS3 because if I accidentally fling it out f my car while driving it home, it might break....
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100618/ap_en_ot/us_games_e3_trends
POETRY IN MOTION
By the end of the year, every major console is slated to have some from of gesture recognition. The PlayStation Move system, which employs a wand-shaped controller and camera to precisely detect players' movements, will give the PlayStation 3 the ability to be more like Nintendo's Wii — except with high-definition graphics and a more mature library of games.
Microsoft is further pushing (and bending, twisting and jumping over) the envelope with the Xbox 360's controller-free Kinect system. The gizmo detects gamers' bodies, including their skeletal systems, to do such things as teach choreography in "Dance Central," administer workouts in "Your Shape: Fitness Evolved" and deploy adorable virtual pets in "Kinectimals."
___
GOING FORWARD
The future is here, judging by the plethora of hereafter-set first-and-third-person shooters showcased at E3. "Fallout: New Vegas" and "Rage" took decidedly post-apocalyptic routes while "Red Faction: Armageddon" and "Dead Space 2" shot for interstellar territories. "Homefront," however, imagines a not-too-distant future in which North Korea invades the U.S.
Whatever the future may hold, apparently everyone will be invisible. "Crysis 2," "Deus Ex: Human Revolution" and "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier" all featured the ability not to be seen in some fashion. In one of the show's most surprising moments, space combat was introduced for intergalactic prequel "Halo: Reach," which also includes invisibility.
___
OLD IS NEW AGAIN
Several beloved franchises were awakened from a deep slumber at E3. Sony's press conference reached a climax when a creepy ice cream truck driven by freaky clowns ominously drove onto the stage at the Shrine Auditorium to unveil that a new installment of the popular car-combat series "Twisted Metal" was coming to the PlayStation 3 platform for the first time.
Nintendo pushed the nostalgia factor higher by digging deep into its catalog for the return of many ****c characters ready for the 21st century: "Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword" enhanced for Wii MotionPlus, "Kirby's Epic Yarn" stitched with a new art **** "Donkey Kong Country Returns" injected with new energy and "Kid Icarus: Uprising" presented fully in 3-D.
___
GROUP DYNAMICS
Developers showed off innovative ways to battle online with new multiplayer modes. The most monstrously enthralling was the new beast mode for "Gears of War 3," which tasks players to take down human forces for the first time as various baddies from the Locust Horde, including explosive Tickers, behemoth Berserkers and something resembling a giant centipede.
Other notable multiplayer modes showcased at E3 included the kill-or-be-killed wanted mode from stealthy sequel "Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood," breakneck faction mode from car crusher "Twisted Metal" and surrealistic trail blazer mode from "Driver: San Francisco," which allows racers to use the game's new shift ability to leap from vehicle to vehicle.
___
UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL
Sony's plans for 3-D came into sharper focus as the electronics empire displayed PlayStation 3 titles, such as "Eye Pet," "Killzone 3," "Gran Turismo 5" and "Motor Storm: Apocalypse," in stereoscopic 3-D. The effect — sometimes as impressive as "Avatar," other times as underwhelming as "Clash of the Titans" — required a 3-D television and spectacles.
Nintendo, on the other hand, dominated this year's E3 with the unveiling of the 3DS, the 3-D handheld console that doesn't require glasses. Attendees waited in a line that snaked all around Nintendo's booth to get their eyes on the surprisingly crisp effect in demonstrations of such games as "Nintendogs and Cats" and "Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater 3D."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100618/ap_en_ot/us_games_e3_trends
POETRY IN MOTION
By the end of the year, every major console is slated to have some from of gesture recognition. The PlayStation Move system, which employs a wand-shaped controller and camera to precisely detect players' movements, will give the PlayStation 3 the ability to be more like Nintendo's Wii — except with high-definition graphics and a more mature library of games.
Microsoft is further pushing (and bending, twisting and jumping over) the envelope with the Xbox 360's controller-free Kinect system. The gizmo detects gamers' bodies, including their skeletal systems, to do such things as teach choreography in "Dance Central," administer workouts in "Your Shape: Fitness Evolved" and deploy adorable virtual pets in "Kinectimals."
___
GOING FORWARD
The future is here, judging by the plethora of hereafter-set first-and-third-person shooters showcased at E3. "Fallout: New Vegas" and "Rage" took decidedly post-apocalyptic routes while "Red Faction: Armageddon" and "Dead Space 2" shot for interstellar territories. "Homefront," however, imagines a not-too-distant future in which North Korea invades the U.S.
Whatever the future may hold, apparently everyone will be invisible. "Crysis 2," "Deus Ex: Human Revolution" and "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier" all featured the ability not to be seen in some fashion. In one of the show's most surprising moments, space combat was introduced for intergalactic prequel "Halo: Reach," which also includes invisibility.
___
OLD IS NEW AGAIN
Several beloved franchises were awakened from a deep slumber at E3. Sony's press conference reached a climax when a creepy ice cream truck driven by freaky clowns ominously drove onto the stage at the Shrine Auditorium to unveil that a new installment of the popular car-combat series "Twisted Metal" was coming to the PlayStation 3 platform for the first time.
Nintendo pushed the nostalgia factor higher by digging deep into its catalog for the return of many ****c characters ready for the 21st century: "Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword" enhanced for Wii MotionPlus, "Kirby's Epic Yarn" stitched with a new art **** "Donkey Kong Country Returns" injected with new energy and "Kid Icarus: Uprising" presented fully in 3-D.
___
GROUP DYNAMICS
Developers showed off innovative ways to battle online with new multiplayer modes. The most monstrously enthralling was the new beast mode for "Gears of War 3," which tasks players to take down human forces for the first time as various baddies from the Locust Horde, including explosive Tickers, behemoth Berserkers and something resembling a giant centipede.
Other notable multiplayer modes showcased at E3 included the kill-or-be-killed wanted mode from stealthy sequel "Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood," breakneck faction mode from car crusher "Twisted Metal" and surrealistic trail blazer mode from "Driver: San Francisco," which allows racers to use the game's new shift ability to leap from vehicle to vehicle.
___
UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL
Sony's plans for 3-D came into sharper focus as the electronics empire displayed PlayStation 3 titles, such as "Eye Pet," "Killzone 3," "Gran Turismo 5" and "Motor Storm: Apocalypse," in stereoscopic 3-D. The effect — sometimes as impressive as "Avatar," other times as underwhelming as "Clash of the Titans" — required a 3-D television and spectacles.
Nintendo, on the other hand, dominated this year's E3 with the unveiling of the 3DS, the 3-D handheld console that doesn't require glasses. Attendees waited in a line that snaked all around Nintendo's booth to get their eyes on the surprisingly crisp effect in demonstrations of such games as "Nintendogs and Cats" and "Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater 3D."
1, Comic Jumperhttp://www.gamespot.com/xbox360/action/comicjumper/index.html
2. Monday Night Fight http://www.gamespot.com/xbox360/action/mondaynightcombat/index.html
3. LIMBO http://www.gamespot.com/xbox360/puzzle/limbo/index.html
The 1st one looks like an update of Comix from the Sega Genesis
The 2nd a 3d version of Smash TV
The 3rd is a 2d side scroller that looks spooky and hypnotic
Any thoughts?
[QUOTE="MizFitAwesome"]
[QUOTE="88mphSlayer"]
nice spin
but
both were moved while the games were booting up/loading menus
88mphSlayer
He never shows the TV screen while the disc is reading. He just says it's reading.
here's the game loading:
Then he focuses solely on the PS3 . If you install the game you go through the start without it reading the disc. Sorry but it's plausible this video is another fake Youtube video...
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