| Coca-Cola said: No wonder Sony is not advertising it. Move has it's own problems and it may be bigger than Kinect's problems. |
Oh, c'mon. Stop the fanboy crap.
What you've proclaimed as Kinects problems, have been technical problems. He said it was better than the Wii's own motion plus control, simply that there were some imperfections with how the controls were implemented in some of the games.
He probably had a 10 minute demo, I'm sure if there was any learning curve on the mechanics, he would not have had time to get over it (quickly reflected with, 'but I was probably not throwing it fast enough', as in, it wasn't working, but at the same time, he probably wasn't using it correctly). So what I'm saying is, whilst he had difficulty with the controls, the controls worked as intended, there is nothing wrong with the move, just potentially some control issues within sports champions.
Furthermore, why suggest that Sony would be hiding these problems? Microsoft has only provided controlled previews of Kinect, nothing like this. Sony sure did a good job choosing to hide the controllers technical inadequacies at a public gaming convention. *rolls eyes*
@Op, much appreciate the impressions. Not something I particularly care about, but it's nice to see that Move adopters shouldn't be disappointed. At least on games where Sony do a good job on the controls. I presume all the shooters will just translate in a pretty simple, lightgun-like mechanic, though. So that should be good for those players.







