LOL
LOL
I really need to grab a cheap copy of Asura's Wrath one of these days....
Spoiler: show
This also if they have time. If no games, at least show off that it has complete synergy with the PS4, unlike the PS3 where the only interaction the two have is games that strictly support crossplay, and hooking it up to your PS3 via the USB cable, which proceeds to lock the PS3 out while you're copying/transferring shit to the handheld.
Damn Vita has bluetooth, not sure why it couldn't work as a dualshock controller supplement with button/touch remappings to deal with the lack of L2/R2.
ROFL man that picture of Geoff Keighley sandwich between the Doritos and Mountain Dew was like a low point in his career.
dead horse, i know, but just read that its sony with a patent on a system that blocks used games. If there's no such restriction announced on feb 20, there's no way MS will have it; they'd be crazy to.
I only see the patent being an 'option' for a publisher to use it if they so desire. It's already technically possible with the PS3 if those crossbuy discs are a sign of them already having the means of embedding unique serial keys into each and every blu-ray disc.
If either system has the block on used games or the system must be online 100% of the time it's a deal breaker for me. Like everyone has said, it would be a horrible decision to implement such things, but it wouldn't surprise me either. I was looking forward to getting a PS4 as I went with 360 this last round. I've only had one rrod. After MS fixed it my system sounds like a helicopter while playing a game.
Killzone 4 is rumored to be a launch title
http://translate.googleusercontent.c...eY3zxjRBy3pZeg
Yakuza 6 Coming to Next Genhttp://gematsu.com/2013/02/toshihiro...t-yakuza-titleYakuza series director Toshihiro Nagoshi teased the next Yakuza title in this week’s issue of Dengeki PlayStation.
According to Nagoshi, the team is taking a programmatic approach with the next title so that players can have a more physical experience.
Regarding the battle system, the team aims to reach new innovations.
About the next game in general, they want to offer a broadened form of play.
Don’t expect to see the next Yakuza title on PlayStation 3, though. Nagoshi said he thinks Yakuza 5 will be the last entry in the series part of PlayStation 3′s generation.
But rest assured the studio will continue developing with the the intent to make things the best they an under the circumstances.
Nagoshi hopes to show the next “something” sometime this year.
http://gamenyarth.blog67.fc2.com/blog-entry-12869.html
I hope GT6 is a launch title, they stopped any real development on GT5 DLC after the spa release.
It's said at every conference / meeting / major event.... Dark Cloud 3 D: where are you!!
http://gematsu.com/2013/02/vg247-rum...ps4-controllerThe PlayStation 4 controller will be “more or less” the same shape as the current DualShock 3 and include a front touch-pad in place of now-moved Start and Select buttons, according to a VG247 source.
This rumor has been previously reported by Kotaku and Edge, whose reports both mentioned a new “Share” button on the controller. According to VG247′s source, this button is non-existant.
The latest rumors suggest the console will come bundled with a “Dual Camera,” utilize Gaikai and have expanded social features, and launch at over $400.
http://www.vg247.com/2013/02/13/ps4-...ge-pre-reveal/
May as well let us use Vita as the controller
Edit: not as remote play
Edit 2: like umvc3
Via Kotaku
Spoiler: showhttp://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...577439962.htmlSony is planning to offer technology to stream games to its next videogame console, people familiar with the company's plans say, alongside other enhancements to bolster its position in the market.
The new technology, to be unveiled Wednesday along with the new console, will allow users to play games delivered over the Internet, these people said. The streaming service, they added, is designed to use current PlayStation 3 titles on the new console; the new device is also expected to play new games stored on optical discs.
Sony's plans come after it acquired Gaikai Inc. last year for $380 million. Though many companies now offer simple games over the Internet, Gaikai was one of several companies that offered online access to visually intense games, which ordinarily require specialized circuitry found on high-end personal computers and gaming consoles.
The streaming technology is one of the new features and enhancements expected to be offered with the new console, which Sony plans to unveil at an event in New York. Sony's new PlayStation, for example, may control the action with higher fidelity cameras for its "Move" motion-sensing technology and touch-sensing pads on new controllers, according to people who have seen and been briefed on the devices.
Microsoft, a longtime Sony rival that is expected to unveil its own next-generation console this year, has shown similar enhancements to that device, upgrades for the cameras and other components in its "Kinect" motion controller to better identify, track and hear gamers as they play, according to people who have been briefed on the company's prototypes.
But Sony's streaming technology may become one of the most talked-about parts of the new device. Industry executives often say they expect cloud gaming to become an important segment of the gaming market, noting that it keeps costs low for customers and allows them to easily play intricate games on mobile devices.
Still, Sony is pushing ahead and has been investing heavily to prepare Gaikai's service, people familiar with the matter say. Microsoft also has experimented with its own version of cloud gaming, people at the company have said, but has in the past questioned the costs associated with building a service large enough to reach all its customers.
If they can't even make remote play work for all titles in a player's home network, what makes them think they can make it work over the Internet?