| Euphoria14 said: "Move forward, stop, dig, dig, dig, dig, stop, turn left, dig, dig, dig, stop, dig, turn left, dig, move forward, dig, turn left, dig, turn left, dig, turn left, dig" Keep it going until you dig a 30x30 area.
Good luck. Then figure out how to drop a crafting table, then make torches, light the room you built 40 blocks under the ground via long ass tedious voice controls then prepare it as a base to continue your pursuit underground. Now go above ground and test your luck building a gigantic castle surrounded by a 200x400 wall, 12 blocks high surrounding your town that you are yourself built. While you're at it build floating islands that lead up to a castle in the sky on a 100x100 landmass that you also needed to take the time to build, starting with a 1x1 block, climbing 30+ levels before you began branching it out to this 100x100 mass before then going back and destroying the 1x1 pillar you created just to reach high enough to build that 100x100 mass. Remember though, after doing all that, build a castle.
With a controller my 5 year old daughter would have done in 30-60 minute, likely even less, all while you're looking like an ass talking to your TV set and taking a life time. Been playing this game with my 5 year old for well over a year now by the way, so I know what i'm talking about. Even played it tonight with a VGC member, although to be 100% honest I am not sure of his name. We spent around 30 minutes building a castle, on the ground. It was only 1 floor, with 4 towers. Try that with stupid voice controls with 4 players working together at the same exact time and needing to quickly remove and replace blocks, lol. |
Yes, you've been playing a game confined to a 2D space within a 3D enviornment on a TV screen.
Now, open that game up to a 3D space, a room, and make it a 3D enviornment. You don't need to make the game move. You just need to physically go where you need to be. When assembling a huge LEGO set, do you move the set? No, it's too big. You go to where you need to assemble and you do what you need to do.
You want to make a cloud up in the sky? Fine, look up and place your blocks where you you want them! You can move around your environment and your game is right there. Start building that castle on top of Fluffy, your cat. When you come back to the game, regardless of whether Fluffy is still there your castle will be where you left it.
Read the Engadget article for his impressions on this. Again, your imagination is limited by the environment and the output and input medium.
I'm going to assume that there will be opportunities where HoloLens will be usable in conjunction with the Xbox One and a controller, where applicable and necessary. I kind of think HoloLens is Microsoft's answer to the 3DS, to be honest. Certainly it's more than gaming, but why not? Why not be able to make a video call using Skype to your workplace while you're stuck in traffic to join a meeting that you're late for? Or while you're running to get your flight to Europe pull-up your gate info? Then when you have an opportunity to relax, pull up a movie, listen to music, or play a game.








