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flappo
11-22-2006, 09:18 AM
A Weekend Full of Quality Time With PlayStation 3

By SETH SCHIESEL
Published: November 20, 2006

Howard Stringer, you have a problem. Your company’s new video game system just isn’t that great.

Sony Computer Entertainment
A view of the screen of “Resistance: Fall of Man,” one of the games for the new Sony PlayStation3.

The controller of Sony PlayStation 3 looks like earlier ones.

Ever since Mr. Stringer took the helm last year at Sony, the struggling if still formidable electronics giant, the world has been hearing about how the coming PlayStation 3 would save the company, or at least revitalize it. Even after Microsoft took the lead in the video-game wars a year ago with its innovative and powerful Xbox 360, Sony blithely insisted that the PS3 would leapfrog all competition to deliver an unsurpassed level of fun.

Put bluntly, Sony has failed to deliver on that promise.

Measured in megaflops, gigabytes and other technical benchmarks, the PlayStation 3 is certainly the world’s most powerful game console. It falls far short, however, of providing the world’s most engaging overall entertainment experience. There is a big difference, and Sony seems to have confused one for the other.

The PS3, which was introduced in North America on Friday with a hefty $599 price tag for the top version, certainly delivers gorgeous graphics. But they are not discernibly prettier than the Xbox 360’s. More important, the whole PlayStation 3 system is surprisingly clunky to use and simply does not provide many basic functions that users have come to expect, especially online.

I have spent more than 30 hours using the PlayStation 3 over the last week or so and may have played more different games on the system — 13 — than probably anyone outside of Sony itself. Sony did not activate the PS3’s online service until just before the Friday debut. Over the weekend a clear sense of disappointment with the PlayStation 3 emerged from many gamers.

“What’s weird is that the PS3 was originally supposed to come out in the spring, and here it came out in the fall, and it still doesn’t feel finished,” Christopher Grant, managing editor of Joystiq, one of the world’s biggest video-game blogs, said on the telephone Saturday night. “It’s really not the all-star showing they should have had at launch. Sony is playing catch-up in a lot of ways now, not just in terms of sales but in terms of the basic functionality and usability of the system.”

Sadly for Sony, the best way to explain how the PlayStation 3 falls short is to explain how different it is to use than its main competition, Xbox 360. When I reviewed the 360 last year, I wrote: “Twelve minutes after opening the box, I had created my nickname, was in a game of Quake 4 and thought, ‘This can’t be this easy.’ ”

I never felt that way using the PlayStation 3. With the PS3, 12 minutes after opening the box I realized that Sony inexplicably does not include cables to connect the machine to a high-definition television. Keep in mind that one of Sony’s main selling points has been that the PS3 plays Blu-Ray high-definition movie discs. But high-definiton cables? Sold separately. The Xbox 360, by contrast, ships with one cable that can connect to either a standard or high-definition set.

Then, before you are even using the PS3, you have to connect the “wireless” controller to the base unit with a USB cable so they can recognize each other. If you bring your PS3 controller to a friend’s house, you’ll have to plug back in again. The 360’s wireless controllers are always just that, wireless.

If there is one thing one would expect Sony to get perfect, though, it would be music. Wrong. Sure, you can plug in your digital music player and the PS3 will play the tunes. But as soon as you go into a game, the music stops. By contrast, one of the things I’ve always enjoyed most on the Xbox 360 is being able to listen to my own music while playing Pebble Beach or driving my virtual Ferrari. Doesn’t seem too complicated, but the PS3 can’t do it.

In that sense it often feels as if the PlayStation 3 can’t walk and chew bubble gum at the same time. In the PS3’s online store (which feels like a slow Web page) you can access movie trailers and trial versions of new games, but when you actually download the 600-megabyte files, you’ll be stuck watching a progress bar crawl across the screen for 20 or 40 minutes. Astonishingly, you can’t download in the background while you go do something that’s more fun (like play a game). On the Xbox 360, not only are files downloaded seamlessly in the background, but you can also shut off the machine, turn it on later, and the download will resume automatically.

The PS3’s whole online experience feels tacked-on and unpolished. On the Xbox 360 each user has a single unified friends list, so you can track your friends and communicate with them easily, no matter what game you are in. On the PlayStation 3 most games have their own separate friends list and some have no friends function at all. There is a master list as well, but in order to communicate with anyone on it, you have to quit the game you are playing.

There are some high points. The multi-player battles in Resistance: Fall of Man are excellent. The arcade-style action in the downloadable Blast Factor is suitably frantic.

But the list of the PS3’s disappointments remains, from its undersupported voice chat to its maddening cellphone-like text messaging system. (In frustration I ended up plugging in a USB keyboard.) Overall, Sony seems to have put a lot of effort into cramming as much silicon horsepower under the hood as possible but to have forgotten that all the transistors in the world can’t make someone smile.

And so it is a bit of a shock to realize that on the video game front Microsoft and Sony are moving in exactly the opposite directions one might expect given their roots. Microsoft, the prototypical PC company, has made the Xbox 360 into a powerful but intuitive, welcoming, people-friendly system. Sony’s PlayStation 3, on the other hand, often feels like a brawny but somewhat recalcitrant specialized computer. (Sony is even telling users to wait for future software patches to fix some of the PS3’s deficiencies.) The thing is, if people want to use a computer, they’ll use a computer.

Through the decades of the Walkman and the Trinitron television, Sony was renowned as the global master of easy-to-use, seamlessly powerful consumer electronics. But recently Sony seems to have lost its way, first in digital music players, in which it ceded the ergonomic high ground to Apple’s iPod, and now in home-game consoles. For now Sony’s technologists seem to have won out over the people who study fun.

As a practical matter, given the limited quantities Sony has been able to manufacture, the PlayStation 3 will surely remain sold out throughout the holiday season. If you can’t find one, don’t fret. Sony still has a lot of work to do. As Mr. Grant of Joystiq put it: “Maybe in six months it’ll be finished. Maybe by next fall I’ll be able to do all the cool stuff. I’m still kind of waiting.

smaz
11-23-2006, 06:16 PM
I remember when I stayed at my friends a week after he got his 360. I played COD2 for 15 minutes, and couldn't find anyone to take the controller off me - everyone was too bored...

Terry
11-23-2006, 09:00 PM
Just have no interest in it.

My PS2 AND PS1 consoles still work fine.

Only reason I got a PS2 was because the wife got me one for my birthday two years after it came out. Was appreciative, but otherwise wouldn't have even bothered with THAT upgrade.

Also read a news article about how a lot of the PS3s were having problems/glitches when it came to playing PS2 and 1 titles on them.

Plus, even though I could easily afford it, $600 for a home gaming console is just a waste of money. I feel the same way about a $4500 tv. Because both will be obsolete in 6 months anyway.

BITEYOASS
11-24-2006, 02:21 AM
I think game consoles and most PC games in general are total shit (with board games, puzzle games, casino simulators, the original Sims, games that make me laugh my ass off, pinball and arcade games with the sole purpose of racking up points being the exception). But I bought Sony stock anyway cause most customers are blind idiots and will lap up anything that is state of the art. Little do they know that the PS3 will cost 75% less a few years from now. So keep keeping up with the jonses you gulible parents, cause I'll be retiring early while you work the rest of your lives paying the enormous credit card bill due to letting your kids kick you around.

Damn it feels good to be a cheap bastard! :D

Revan
11-24-2006, 05:09 AM
I had a suspicion it was going to be junk. Seems like this mostly confirms it.

I'll stick with my 360.

Nickdfresh
11-24-2006, 03:53 PM
I'll stick to my original plan and pick up a PS3 when it's "finished" --next summer...

flappo
11-25-2006, 04:20 PM
get an hd screen and play gears of war on xbox 360 @ 1080 i / p

NICE N LOUD

beliieve me , you'll be converted

:)

svrwthr
11-25-2006, 10:51 PM
Fuck it. Dont buy either. The PS3 is glorified cheap assed blue ray DVD player that plays games too. Just wait for the actual blue ray DVD player to come down to $150.00 and buy a PS2 for $129 and you save yourself 2x+ than buying a PS3 and actually get cables with the DVD player unlike the PS3.

As for the XBox/360, if they had a less bulky controller I would most likely go that route.

For me in reality, I think I will just upgrade my computer and save myself even more and play on the computer. In which I can hook up to my 42" LCD tv, enjoy the internet, actually do something creative and still play games without having to be limited to basically buying add-ons to a system for all the above.


Miscrosoft, Sony and Nintendo are just scamming you into buying a cheap computer that pretty much only plays games and music and selling it to the suckers at an outrangous price.

If there was a way to do it, anone could build those systems for around $100.

DrMaddVibe
11-26-2006, 12:32 AM
How sad is it that M$ gets an "A" in the video game wars?

PS3 for all it's hubbub...just wake me when they tumble to say, 300.00!!

Revan
11-26-2006, 09:57 AM
Microsoft still destroys the competition. Bulky controller? Get a knockoff that's smaller for $20. They're out there. If you want to turn your Xbox into a PC, with all the PC functions, just do it. It's all in there, practically all you need is a screwdriver and a saudering gun. Better yet, take it to a professional modder who can unlock everything and upgrade the inner workings inside of 40 minutes...

Nintendo's still making games for children, and with the next gen console wars...well...children aren't the ones spending $450 for a system and demanding quality; this is an ADULTS market, and Nintendo just can't (or won't) market adult based games. Have fun with Luigi's Mansion II on your Wii, I guess...

PS3's just shoddy and unfinished, from the looks of things. Encouraging your customers to buy patches for the known existing bugs before the sysrems even in full release is a sign of problems from the get-go. They have a large volume of game titles, but very few of them are worth replaying on a regular basis.

The only mistake Microsoft did last year was not having enough of a game selection arsenal at launch, but there are now a LOT of quality games readily available for the 360 and the online experience is unparalleled.

PC gaming is limited, I think; I have little interest in open ended never ending MMORPGs, those just bore me to tears after a month. There's just nothing to do with them after a while. On top of that, I'm a romantic; I love the feel of a controller in my hands and looking at a TV screen, something I brought with me from my Collecovision/Atari 2600 days, I guess. PC gaming will never match that for me.

I love my Xbox dammit! :)

TAKIN WHISKEY
11-26-2006, 10:31 AM
Just got a ps3 on wed. I haven't played it yet, it's going under the tree for my teenage daughters. It is worth the price for the blue-ray alone. I know alot of you are not into that shit but HD tv and a plasma are the absolute way to watch tv or game. Ya i spent the money on them. It's all priorities I guess. One thing I can say is on Sunday, during the NFL season there is nothing better than watching any game you want in High Def, thanks to Sunday ticket and superfan. I have a very good feeling I won't be disappointed when I play the ps3. But to each his own. Peace!

BITEYOASS
11-26-2006, 04:31 PM
Originally posted by svrwthr
For me in reality, I think I will just upgrade my computer and save myself even more and play on the computer. In which I can hook up to my 42" LCD tv, enjoy the internet, actually do something creative and still play games without having to be limited to basically buying add-ons to a system for all the above.

That's a simple solution! If your computer has a video card with an S-Video outlet and if you have an audio cable in which one end hooks up to the computer's headphone jack and the other end hooks up to the leftand right audio jacks, you'll be having the ultimate Home entertainment center in no time. The total cost of both the audio and S-Video cables will be only $25-30, that is if your just doing the basic 2.1 stereo for the audio and have a digital television. :D

BITEYOASS
11-26-2006, 04:35 PM
Now if you have a PC tower which doesn't have an S-Video outlet, then you can easily modify it with a simple 128MB PCI Video card for $40.