Hardly. He's a sweet old guy, but he wouldn't know a Dual Shock from a DVD remote.
I had to be honest, though. I think part of it is that when you're younger, you have a ton of free time, and you want to learn to do things for no better reason than the fact that you
can. As you get older, you're saddled with more responsibilities and less time, and you have to prioritize how you spend that time. I enjoy playing games, and I'd like to spend what time I have learning to play
new games, not relearning
how to play games. And again, if I saw this as something more than a gimmicky way to control the action, maybe I wouldn't feel so ambivalent about it. Why
should the idea of swinging my hand in the air to slash with a sword instead of pressing a button excite me? I'm asking you for an honest answer here. What's so thrilling about it that you think I ought to be saying, 'Oh, wow, awesome!' and getting excited at the thought of doing that for 2-3 hours at a time, and probably getting worse results than I would if the game had been designed for a conventional controller?
Yes, but as I've said before, I feel the learning curve should come from the game and not the interface. If you want to challenge a typist that's been typing on a standard QWERTY keyboard for years, do you create interesting challenges that force her to use those skills to the max, or do you randomize the position of the keys so she has to learn how to type all over again before she can get anywhere?
You're right. My point is that this doesn't sound like it's going to
be 'fun and entertaining' for
me. I'm sorry if that doesn't fit with what you want people to feel, but not everybody's going to embrace this thing with open arms. Not everyone
wants to have to toss out everything they know and start over from zero, and it's a perfectly valid complaint. Like I said, it's terrific for non-gamers--they don't have any existing gaming skills to begin with, so
they're not being forced to give up anything. For me, the idea feels like somebody suggesting that losing the use of my legs and having to learn to walk again is 'a fun challenge' that I ought to enjoy, you know, just for shits and giggles.