futurer0ckstar's forum posts
HECK YES! Insomniac works wonders! Ratchet and Clank is their best!
Of course, being a Christian myself, I must agree with one poster that Jesus is far better than any game developer. His Father developed the universe!
Dude, not to bias, but I have both a PSP and a DS and I say PSP. I've had my DS for two years now, and it was great for the first year, but then it just died (in both how much fun I have playing it and working order. I had to get mine replaced for freezing problems MANY TIMES.). DS got extremely boring. However, I would recommend it to Nintendo fans (obviously) and if you like the kinds of games DS has to offer, buy yourself a DS. You would not be able to do me a greater honor. On the other hand, if you REALLY like having graphics pixel perfect in your games and you want a storage device on the side, buy the PSP. The PSP can only mezmerize with its sleek graphical abilities and shocking audio and video quality.
Now I've seen, heard, tasted, and smelled all this crap about "real gamers" going with DS only. Or to some degree, NINTENDO only. Let me tell you now that there is no greater baloney in video gaming history than that besides SEGA's "Genesis does what Nintendon't" campaign. That may sound like a contradiction, but first let me imply my point: The true gamer smiles upon all of the gaming systems--not just one or two or three--ALL OF THEM. I own many Nintendo systems, 2 Sega systems, and 2 Sony systems, and I can officially say that a fanboy is the exact opposite of a gamer: Sticking to his own system rather than appreciating the technological marvel of the consoles of today.
Eh...I think 360 actually looks better. If you eye the textures REALLY closely, 360 is a bit of an improvement. But who's to say that a minor difference in detail decides which console is better? Personally, I'm a HUGE PS3 fan. PS3 gives you so many things in one box, whereas with Xbox 360 you have to buy EVERYTHING for it. Plus, not only does PS3 support Blu-ray, the leading high definition format (although not as technologically advanced as HD-DVD), it uses single (25GB), double (50GB), AND triple (75+GB) layered Blu-ray discs for games! But with Xbox 360 games, you just buy DVD-DLs which have 9GB at maximum. Come to think of it, that's the reason why Halo 3's single player segment was so short: Not enough space for all of the high-def graphics involved.
Xbox will be loved by me and other true gamers, but in the end, I can see the PS3 winning out because of its use of the Blu-ray format. However, in the NEXT battle, Xbox 720 (that's what it could be named) versus PlayStation 4 (Sony's confirmed it, but not before 2010), we'll see if Microsoft did their homework. But until then, gamers, I'll be improving my online skills on PSN and waiting for Home to release across the PlayStation Store. Adios!
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