It's shit. Even if I do get a 3D-capable TV I doubt I'd be using it. But if I do I'll be sure to report back just how shit it is!Kluden wrote:Since all nice 1080p TV's now a days have 3D built in, its going to be hard to not get 3D. If the glasses are in the box with the TV, like mine were, you wouldn't be saying that its shit, that much I can say because I have experience with 3D tv and gaming and bluray...its way different at home vs. the setup at BestBuy.
Anyway.. Wii U (seriously?) specs:
And of course they have another gimmicky controlller. Hopefully they don't try and have every game cram that shit down people's throats like every game had to have motion controls for the Wii even if it didn't benefit at all from that sort of control scheme. Interesting that they are keeping Gamecube compatibility. Wasn't that a way in for the hackers with the Wii? It was years ago I can't recall now. I'm sure they wont make the same mistake again.1. Graphics: Custom AMD RV770 Chip “WOLF” @ 766 Mhz on 32nm process 1398 Gflops
2. Memory: 512 MB XDR2 DRAM
3. CPU: Custom IBM Power 6 Chip “FOX” on 32nm process
4. 4 cores, each two way SMT – capable and clocked at 3.5 ghz
5. Backwards compatible with 8cm Nintendo GameCube Game Disc and 12 cm Wii Optical Disc
6. Custom Bluray-Disc up to 50 GB
7. Storage: 2.5-inch SATA hard drive with 250 GB/ 320 GB capacity / Expanded storage via SD and SDHC card memory (up to 64 GB)
Note: I didn't actually watch the presentation or read much about it other than specs so I don't know how the controller actually functions other than it has its own display. Or something like that.
Switching gears - Personally I think while the PSVita is reasonably priced it wont sell as well as previous models around the world in the same way the 3DS doesn't seem to be. With other mobile platforms like smart phones and tablets I don't think mandheld gaming machines have the market that they did before. I know I wont be buying one!
Edit! I guess 'custom blu-ray' in the list aboe is called iDensity and supposedly only 25GB. So not sure if that means it will play Blu-Rays as well or not.:
In a wide-ranging interview with Kotaku regarding the new Wii U console, one of Nintendo's chief game designers, Katsuya Eguchi, confirmed that the system's proprietary disc format will hold 25 Gigabytes of data. That squares with our own reporting from before E3 and puts Nintendo in a good place to run games that fill up a single-layer 25GB Blu-Ray disc, the format used by current console king of large game discs, the PlayStation 3.