I wasn't a big fan of MS's presentation yesterday, it was clumsy as hell. But come on... Blow..? A grain of salt people, a grain of salt..
It happened this gen...
Eesh this stuff is bumming me out.
That 30fpsvs60fps, even if technically possible, isn't going to happen.
Microsoft will just go "Both games must be pretty much the same or we won't let you publish it"
.
He's ryg from Farbrausch. IMO one of the people that when he speaks, you sit down and listen. Their demos (and demo making tools even) are stuff of legends.Who is this Fabian fella?
It happened this gen...
People keep mentioning "the cloud" being a big difference maker. But you have to realize that the games still have to come out with full capability for those people who only connect to the internet once per day. Remember? The games have to be compatible when the internet is down for up to 24 hours.
it's not just Blow. it's common sense. we all know there is less power available for devs in the XB1 + more OS bloat for XB1. that's a fact. that's not a myth or BS, it's fact.
The PS3 got a ton of half assed ports?What happened this gen?
The Killzone Shadow Fall trailer was low framerate (certainly less than 25 in the opening). I'd love to see 60 fps standard though, as that was what I was used to on the Gamecube.
I don't think so. When you look at Microsoft's last few E3 presentations with the 360, their reveal for the One is actually exactly in line with their admitted focus for the 360--furthering a concentration on the media aspects of their console, using gaming as a conduit to become the primary entertainment center in people's living rooms.Not really. Lack of focus / rushed time tables did it.
Sorry but that is bullshit. Digital Foundry said rock solid 30FPS (which pretty much means that if game wouldn't be locked to 30 it would go much higher)
Sorry but that is bullshit. Digital Foundry said rock solid 30FPS (which pretty much means that if game wouldn't be locked to 30 it would go much higher)
Sorry, but anyone with eyes can tell that the opening of the trailer is less than the standard framerate for film (24 fps). Take another look yourself.
Will they fix this for the final release? Probably.
People keep mentioning "the cloud" being a big difference maker. But you have to realize that the games still have to come out with full capability for those people who only connect to the internet once per day. Remember? The games have to be compatible when the internet is down for up to 24 hours.
It could be poorly encoded trailer. DF usually knows what they're talking about, and even have framedrop analyzing software, and usually much better video sources than normally available. Also, the publicly available trailer was not less than 24FPS during that opening, but it did skip frames here and there, which can be verified by going frame by frame though it. To be less than 24 it would have to skip a lot more.Sorry, but anyone with eyes can tell that the opening of the trailer is less than the standard framerate for film (24 fps). Take another look yourself.
Will they fix this for the final release? Probably.
This... I like this.* Super Meat Boy creator Tommy Refenes - "Little brothers everywhere have been given the ultimate trolling tool While older brother and friends play COD "XBOX NETFLIX MY LITTLE PONY"
Sorry, but anyone with eyes can tell that the opening of the trailer (i.e. prior to the explosion) is less than the standard framerate for film (24 fps). Take another look yourself. (I watched this trailer as a 1080p mp4 on my PS3, so it's not a slow computer or YouTube at fault either.)
Will they fix this for the final release? Probably.
So he's lying? Are we calling him a liar? Do we have evidence for this or at least evidence of a history of lying on his part?It is. He still shouldn't be listed as a credible source for anything in this context.
the digital foundry guy is blind?
Also, the publicly available trailer was not less than 24FPS during that opening, but it did skip frames here and there, which can be verified by going frame by frame though it. To be less than 24 it would have to skip a lot more.
There was a link on Sony's site that showed a much smoother video than the one used.
The PS3 got a ton of half assed ports?
This makes sense, but you're wrong that there weren't enough skipped frames to go less than 24. I know what 24 fps looks like, and there were several parts of the opening that were flat-out choppy. (Look at the ships flying as your own ship lands.) 24 fps doesn't look choppy; it maintains the illusion of seamless motion, albeit with blur/judder for pans and fast motion.
Games were similar on two machines that were of similar power, but the slightly weaker one ended up with small compromises?
You don't say?
I bet Microsoft will have it in the contract that devs cant do that for multiplat games even if they wanted to.
Maybe it's a smart business move. Tv is big business after all. Billions of couchpotatos in the worldI don't think so. When you look at Microsoft's last few E3 presentations with the 360, their reveal for the One is actually exactly in line with their admitted focus for the 360--furthering a concentration on the media aspects of their console, using gaming as a conduit to become the primary entertainment center in people's living rooms.
Sony impressed a lot of people with their reveal because they seemed to be actively seeking a gamer-centric, developer-centric approach with their next console. Microsoft, on the other hand, appears very focused in that they haven't really changed their approach to engaging with consumers in any way. If anything, they are doubling-down on ignoring the interests of core gamers in order to appeal to a broader audience (e.g., opening your console's reveal with tv, tv, tv, sports, fantasy football, tv, Call of Duty etc.), which could very well come back to bite them in the end. Honestly, the reveal was at 12:00 P.M. on a Tuesday. Who but hardcore gamers would be watching it live?
Also, in terms of time tables, MS actually had as much or more time to dedicate to their next console than Sony did, with the PS3 launching an entire year after the 360 and playing catch-up for a large portion of its lifespan.
This is why it seems to me that Sony has learned from its prior mistakes and has taken prior criticisms to heart with the PS4, while Microsoft will just continue to do whatever Microsoft wants to do.
Yes it does, what are you talking about? Cinematic frame-rate in games has always been horrible, hell any frame drops below 30 is terrible.
I was talking about the pressure from console manufacturers to have games be identical, both in looks and content or they wouldn't be published. MS once had a meeting explaining devs how they should downgrade their game if necessary. Sony makes them have extra content if the game releases later on the PS3 or it won't get published. etc. These restrictions are real.
Microsoft's Content Submission and Release Policy, seen by Eurogamer, details its third-party publisher guidelines.
"Titles for Xbox 360 must ship at least simultaneously with other video game platform, and must have at least feature and content parity on-disc with the other video game platform versions in all regions where the title is available," it reads.
"If these conditions are not met, Microsoft reserves the right to not allow the content to be released on Xbox 360."
This also applies to Xbox Live Arcade games. Other Online Content "must simultaneously release on Xbox Live Marketplace in all regions where the game is available". Any demo on Xbox Live Marketplace "must ship within the same week of its launch on other video game platforms or via magazines".
Isn't Blow's new game a timed ex for PS4? Maybe some FUD here.
Our deal with Sony is a limited-time exclusivity that applies to competing console platforms. Basically it is that you will see the game on the PlayStation 4 for a while before you will see it on the Wii U or the rumored next Microsoft console. (We haven’t been disclosed on Microsoft’s next console, so I don’t know anything about that platform besides the rumors that are on the internet).
This exclusivity does not prevent us from being on the PC or iOS at launch, for example.
It's obvious now that their whole strategy was based on Always Online and cloud computing to make the hardware more effective.
the incredible backlash last month has screwed up all their plans..
assuming most people keep it online anyway or that they require a connection every 24 hours etc, hopefully eventually it will still come to pass where the hardware in the box doesn't really matter as much and the cloud assist will make the games better
in before the doubters who don't think it will work... it WILL
here is a good conversation of how it might be implemented
24 FPS only doesn't look choppy when it's evenly spaced 24FPS, and when there's motion blur present. Otherwise it looks pretty choppy. When you have a baseline 30FPS footage and then frames are skipped randomly, you could still have average 26-27FPS, but it would look choppy just because it's not evenly spaced in time, but frame drops are randomly thrown in.This makes sense, but you're wrong that there weren't enough skipped frames to go less than 24. I know what 24 fps looks like, and there were several parts of the opening that were flat-out choppy. (Look at the ships flying as your own ship lands.) 24 fps doesn't look choppy; it maintains the illusion of seamless motion, albeit with blur/judder for pans and fast motion.
Link please?
LOL. How do you manage to watch movies? 24 fps is terrible for fast-paced action, as it makes everything a blur, but it certainly doesn't make things choppy. Choppy is the slideshow effect; one moment an object is here, the next it's there, with no transition in between.
As they say: ''So it begins!'', and so it should, because during the Xbox One reveal, gamers were slighted by Microsoft.
Could this be the new whipping boy for the generation?
Could Nintendo's U be not all that bad?
Find out on the next episode of NeoGAF Z.
I will say that this is only the start of the snowball effect that will come tumbling down Mount. Game as a massive spherical form of doom.
Soon more people will call out Microsoft's tv box one for going in this direction.
They are trying to pull a Nintendo Wii, but doing it all wrong.
Just like Nintendo was trying to pull a Wii with the U.
Well, Bioshock Infinite had the original Bioshock on the PS3 version's bluray AND Move support, but no Bioshock or Kinect support for the 360 version. Also, Dante's Inferno had it's "Divine Edition" on PS3, which was essentially the 360 version with other features, including the entire original poem. So, Microsoft may claim that they have this power, but off the top of my head I can think of instances in which 2K and EA have completely ignored it in this console generation.Do you have a link for that?
I only knew that MS would not allow a game for their platform if it didn't have feature parity with other releases and would be released later.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2011-08-24-why-microsoft-wont-publish-psn-firsts
I think most devs picked the 360 as their lead platform because it was easier to develop for, and had many issues with porting their games over to the PS3 due to the more complicated architecture despite having more power in theory.and this is MS fault?
Bacause from what I understand he is saying exactly that which for me doesn't really make sens.
MS isn't responsible for PS3's architecture.
I also don't agree that all this games were half assed but I know people like to blame everything on "lazy developers".
Third parties leading on XBox one, and having to deal with the super over-complex PS4 architecture and super difficult development environment is like totally going to happen again.
* Bethesda Softworks VP Pete Hines - "I imagine there are some cable box manufacturers who are starting to sweat right now."
why? we still need cable boxes to plug into the console.
Why? If they've got a vested interest in the xbox they're just going to lie to you or speak in PR babble.I would like to read comments that come from someone that isn't sleeping in bed with Sony. Someone that will probably develop for both platforms.
why? we still need cable boxes to plug into the console.
...
Bethesda making a xbone exclusive confirmed >_>
Dat Infinite Cloud Power.It's obvious now that their whole strategy was based on Always Online and cloud computing to make the hardware more effective.
the incredible backlash last month has screwed up all their plans..
assuming most people keep it online anyway or that they require a connection every 24 hours etc, hopefully eventually it will still come to pass where the hardware in the box doesn't really matter as much and the cloud assist will make the games better
in before the doubters who don't think it will work... it WILL
here is a good conversation of how it might be implemented