Thursday, June 9, 2011

Best of E3

The Electronic Entertainment Expo is a spectacular showcase of all things video game, where developers, publishers and gamers from all over the world gather to see what the future of gaming has to offer.

Here are our E3 2011 award nominations so far.

Best Overall Game


Tomb Raider
Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Batman: Arkham City
BioShock Infinite
Hitman: Absolution
Mass Effect 3
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword
Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception
Battlefield 3

Best Xbox 360 Game


Forza Motorsport 4
Tomb Raider
BioShock Infinite
Hitman: Absolution
Batman: Arkham City
Mass Effect 3
Gears of War 3
Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Battlefield 3
Prey 2

Best PS3 Game


Hitman: Absolution
Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception
BioShock Infinite
Twisted Metal
Tomb Raider
Batman: Arkham City
Resistance 3
Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Battlefield 3
Prey 2
PixelJunk: SideScroller
Journey
Sly Cooper: Thieves In Time
Papa & Yo
Dark Souls

Best Wii Game

The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword
Disney Universe

Best PC Game

BioShock Infinite
Star Wars: The Old Republic
Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Tomb Raider
Payday: The Heist
Prey 2
RAGE
Battlefield 3
Batman: Arkham City
Mass Effect 3
Hitman: Absolution

Best 3DS Game

Super Mario 3DS
Kid Icarus Uprising

Best Playstation Vita Game

Uncharted: Golden Abyss
Sound Shapes
Little Big Planet Vita
Hot Shots Golf Next
Super Stardust Delta
BlazBlue: Continuum Shift II Plus

Best iPhone/iPad Game

Puzzle Agent 2


Best Action Game

Hitman: Absolution
Tomb Raider
Batman: Arkham City
Deus Ex: Human Revolution
Assassin's Creed Revelations
Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword

Best Fighting Game

Street Fighter X Tekken
BlazBlue: Continuum Shift II Plus
Skullgirls

Best Motion-Controlled Game

Medieval Moves: Deadmund's Quest
Little Big Planet Vita
Dance Central 2
Fruit Ninja Kinect
Kinect Sports: Season 2
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword
Sesame Street: Once Upon a Monster
The Gunstringer

Best Music/Rhythm Game

Rocksmith
Dance Central 2
Sound Shapes

Best Platforming Game

Rayman Origins
Sly Cooper: Thieves In Time
Super Mario 3DS

Best Puzzle Game

Tetris 3DS

Best Racing Game

Forza Motorsports 4
Mario Kart 3DS
Need For Speed: The Run

Best Role-Playing Game

Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Mass Effect 3
Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning
Star Wars: The Old Republic
Deus Ex: Human Revolution

Best Shooter

Far Cry 3
Prey 2
BioShock Infinite
Battlefield 3
RAGE
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3
Resistance 3

Best Sports Game

Madden NFL 12
FIFA Soccer 12
SSX
NBA 2K12

Best Strategy Game

No nominees yet. Check back soon.

Best Family Game

Everybody Dance
Medieval Moves: Deadmund's Quest
Kinect Sports: Season 2
Kinect Disneyland Adventures
Eye Pet & Friends
Disney Universe
Sesame Street: Once Upon a Monster

Best Trailer

Assassin's Creed Revelations
Tomb Raider
Twisted Metal
Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception
Resistance 3
Mass Effect 3

Coolest Tech

Playstation Vita
Cheap Sony 3D TV
PS3/Vita cross play with Ruin
Kinect Fun Labs
Wii U Controller

Most Anticipated Game Award

Batman: Arkham City
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword
Dead Island
The Last Guardian
Kinect: Star Wars
Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception
X-Men: Destiny
Mass Effect 3
RAGE
Deus Ex: Human Revolution
Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Resistance 3
Battlefield 3
Gears of War 3

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

E3 2011

Alright guys, lets go ahead and talk about some of the stuff that is coming with E3. Some of the biggest, being the Wii U, PS Vita, and Halo 4.

Now lets go ahead and take a look at the Wii U. There is a lot of confusing with this bad boy. And some are saying that possibly, PS3 + PS Vita - Wii U. Since they can pretty much do the same thing. Confused a little bit? Lets go into more detail.

The Wii U is an entirely new console that is backwards compatible with the Wii. A Wii U game can only be played on a Wii U system, NOT a Wii. The Wii U console will do all the rendering for the controllers and beam the video feed out to each individual controller. That takes an awful lot of bandwidth, way more than bluetooth can handle (note that the Wii U controller is reported to have two different wireless transmitters, bluetooth for the standard controller functions and a much higher bandwidth transmitter for the video and audio). For this to work with the PS3 and Vita it would have to work over the much lower bandwidth Wi-Fi connection and rendered separately by every single connected device, the PS3 console and each connected Vita. Sorry, but I can only imagine the amount of lag this would introduce. Sure, the Vita could possibly do the whole "playing a PS3 game on a handheld," but that is only a very, VERY small part of what the Wii U controller was described to be able to do. That is kinda the dilemma here. Will the PS3 + Vita have lag? Or can it hold up it's own against the Wii U? PS3 + Vita is pretty much the same thing as the Wii U. But which can do it better?

The price of a PS3 and PS Vita combined would presumably be more expensive than a Wii U and its controller, but if you are already one of the 50 million PS3 owners worldwide then $249 for the Wi-Fi PS Vita could be more appealing than shelling out for the Wii U – with the added bonus of gaining a genuine portable entertainment device that you can throw in your bag and play with away from home.

Sony certainly has experience with a setup similar to Nintendo's Wii U with its Remote Play service for PS3, which allows PSP owners to browse and stream content from their PlayStation 3 console. And though largely unheralded, Lair – one of the very earliest titles for the PS3 – allowed the player to stream the game to their PSP screen with no lag. The downside was the sacrifice of control – the PSP only has one thumbstick when the game needed two to perform adequately. But such issues won't arise with the PS Vita, given it practically has every control interface type known to man – from twin sticks to touch screens.

Of course, there are plenty of other factors to consider. No specifications for the Wii U console itself have been revealed, and the final console could well be uber powerful, play Blu-rays, vacuum your carpet – who knows? But the point is: do you want to make space for a new (admittedly tiny) box under your TV, or do you want to make room in your bag for a new handheld?

So like I've been saying, there is a lot of debate going on with this. And we'll have more details on that later.

We'll chat more later

-j-