PlayStation's Move ups the interaction, fidelity

AP
AP
4 Min Read

At first touch, the PlayStation Move feels awfully familiar.

Unveiled at last week s Game Developers Conference in San Francisco, Sony s forthcoming wand-shaped motion controller and the smaller sub-controller handle similarly to Nintendo s Wii Remote and Nunchuck. There are differences, of course: It s lighter. There are fewer buttons. The batteries are rechargeable. And there s that big glowing sphere on the end.

The biggest difference seems to be in the games – admittedly in early stages of development – that were showcased for the PlayStation Move at several events during the conference. There s another level of interaction and kinetic fidelity with many of these titles because the system uses a PlayStation Eye camera and can literally make players part of the game.

Here s a rundown

EyePet

Gamers can feed, clean, and entertain their own virtual monkey-like creatures in this augmented reality title aimed at youngsters that relies on a PlayStation Eye camera pointed at the floor. The controller becomes different tools, such as a hairdryer or x-ray machine, that help to take care of and customize the cuddly lil cooing critters.

Motion Fighter

Controllers are required in each hand for this stylized brawler that s reminiscent of Fight Club. Punches must be followed through to land on an opponent. Unfortunately, some of the more intricate pugilistic approaches, such as uppercuts or grabs, awkwardly require button mashing or a twisting of the wrist to register on screen.

Move Party

This collection of silly arm-flapping amusements, such as swatting virtual bugs or creating digital paintings, is focused on projecting the action around players with the help of the PlayStation Eye camera. Players are displayed on screen with the controller appearing as such cartoony tools as a giant bug swatter or oversized paint brush.

Slider

A one-handed combination of wrist movements controls virtual characters riding office chairs and other pieces of furniture through the streets of Japan in this quirky casual downhill racer. Players must drift, jump, duck and kick through obstacles, such as cardboard boxes, barrels and even a few mobsters, as they scoot to the end of the course.

SOCOM 4

The upcoming third-person shooter sequel will support both the standard controller and the PlayStation Move system. The wand-shaped controller is used to target enemies and look around the environment while movement is strictly activated with the analog stick on the sub-controller. Button taps trigger sharper aiming and lunging to cover.

Sports Champions

An obvious challenger to Wii Sports Resort, this assemblage of casual sport games, such as table tennis, flying disc golf, archery and beach volleyball, highlights the PlayStation Move s increased precision. In a gladiator fighting mini-game, players use two controllers to wield both a shield and a sword against oncoming foes.

The Shoot

This lighthearted arcade-style shoot em up turns the PlayStation Move wand-shaped controller into a blaster used to strike down baddies invading Hollywood movie sets. The controller s function isn t just limited to simply pointing and shooting. One particularly wacky maneuver involves spinning around in place to freeze time on the screen.

TV Superstars

Here s another silly mini-game collection. This one uses the camera to create avatars of players, recording a catch phrase and snapping their neutral, happy and angry faces. Users are then cast as contestants on over-the-top fashion, cooking, home improvement and Japanese game shows with winners later popping up in phony commercials.

TAGGED:
Share This Article
By AP
Follow:
The AP is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers.
Leave a comment