RokkanStoned
Member
I loved the Vita, so I'd easily buy a new Sony portable, as long as it's designed well and has backwards compatibility to the digital library of the Vita.
Was there any exclusive games that made having a PSP or PS Vita worthwhile?
Always looked at them as multimedia devices more than anything else.
The Vita was a PSP with "off the shelf hardware". Hardware wasn't a problem (well, with the exception of the pricey proprietary memory card situation) they just needed to support it better, they didn't have system sellers and they somehow let Monster Hunter go exclusive to their direct competitor.A psp with off the shelf hardware should be great with full support from 3rd party publishers
The Vita was... underwhelming, even at launch. Load times were slow, graphics weren't native resolution. The OLED was the best part of that system, and even then, there was mura and burn-in.The Vita was a PSP with "off the shelf hardware". Hardware wasn't a problem (well, with the exception of the pricey proprietary memory card situation) they just needed to support it better, they didn't have system sellers and they somehow let Monster Hunter go exclusive to their direct competitor.
The Vita was... underwhelming, even at launch. Load times were slow, graphics weren't native resolution. The OLED was the best part of that system, and even then, there was mura and burn-in.
The people that own one will go down with the ship for it. The fact is, nobody bought the thing. It sold worse than the GameGear, and coming off the PSP, was an abject failure.I can't say I agree with this. I mean, it was released the same year as the 3ds, and blew that out of the water... and the success of the 3ds shows that being cutting edge isn't required to begin with. I never found the vita 'underwhelming'... and I don't really remember that being the dominant opinion at launch. In fact, I thought people were pretty happy with it.
The 3DS was on a path to failure too until Nintendo really put the effort into saving it. Sony didn't do that for the Vita (and Nintendo didn't do that for the Wii U). I agree with you though that the Vita was never underwhelming. Not sure how anyone can say that, underwhelming compared to what?I can't say I agree with this. I mean, it was released the same year as the 3ds, and blew that out of the water... and the success of the 3ds shows that being cutting edge isn't required to begin with. I never found the vita 'underwhelming'... and I don't really remember that being the dominant opinion at launch. In fact, I thought people were pretty happy with it.
Well that's interesting. Nintendo fought to save the 3DS but not the Wii U. So......why so much faith in Nintendo?With their complete disregard for the Vita, I'll stick to my Switch for portable gaming. Won't trust Sony with another handheld until at least 3 years of support has passed.
Did Nintendo ever improve the battery life on 3DS models?I hope, that Sony would continue to focus all their efforts on a home consoles for core gamers. Nintendo with nVidia will eventually make a decent handheld (either new revision of the Switch or Switch2) without those huge bezels, with better screen, normal battery life time, etc. If you really want this kind of device, you would be better off with that one.
The people that own one will go down with the ship for it. The fact is, nobody bought the thing. It sold worse than the GameGear, and coming off the PSP, was an abject failure.
It's great that you love it, but only the people that bought it and kept it think so.
It had mediocre phone hardware with ok controls, a still atrocious storage problem, and a screen that had big pluses and minuses . PSP was a better handheld for its time.
I don't think you can apply 3ds history onto switch. Simply switching Switch to a more modern SoC (compared to 3 y.o. tegra X1) would greatly improve power efficiency with the same performance.Did Nintendo ever improve the battery life on 3DS models?
OLED is raise the price too high. it would not be successful the price was $500+. IPS or LCD is good enough. Stick with the Vita carts for backward compatibility. Allow Micro SD and include a vita SD adapter. Sell a TV dock that will allow upscaled 4k or even true 4k and HDR.
I doubt they can use Tegra, i'm sure Nintendo has some sort of contract with nvidia to restrict sales to competitors. maybe they can work with AMD for a mobile chip.
Well that's interesting. Nintendo fought to save the 3DS but not the Wii U. So......why so much faith in Nintendo?
I'm not moving anything.Huh? I never argued it sold well. You said it was 'underwhelming'. That is what I responded to. You're now talking about sales... well, yeah. Sales were underwhelming, but the device was not. There were plenty of causes for the Vita's issues, but 'underwhelming' was not one of them. Stop moving goalposts.
Joke post? I genuinely laughed.I think the best way for Sony to make a new portable is to support Nintendo Switch....make portable games on it..
Minus the Xbox games and you've basically described the GPD Win series of handhelds or the (maybe) upcoming Smach Z. Handhelds running full Windows 10 (and thus full Steam) on x86 Intel and AMD SoCs respectively. There is a currently ongoing IGG crowdfunding campaign for the Win 2 here if you're interested in taking a look, or just watch some Youtube video's to see what the hardware can do.Revisiting this topic, I realize that Microsoft partnering with Valve and releasing an Steamboy or Xboy One that could play your entire Xbox and Steam game libraries would be vastly preferable. MS has the software emulation experitise to get the Xbox store and steam software running on either Intel or AMDs newest mobile APUs.
I'm not moving anything.
The Vita had hardware barely on par with iPhones of the time, and was rapidly eclipsed. Load times were slow, which shouldn't be the case for games loading off flash. Games were not even rendering at native screen resolution. Framerate was unsteady, even with the resolution drop. On top of all that Sony absolutely gouged for memory cards, making it a total toss up on making digital worth it. This is without mentioning the 3G models. If that's what you expected for a next gen PSP, then I'm glad you got everything you wanted.
The other guy was completely correct as well, they needed a full DS2 layout, and they couldn't even get that right.
And stop with theirNobody would buy it.
Nobody wants to end up with a dead phone at some inconvenient moment when they can't charge. Most people don't buy $500+ phones.
Dedicated handhelds have their place, as the Switch has proven.
You just need to be careful with the Bill of Materials and have rock-solid amounts of post-launch support. Sony failed in both of these cases with the Vita. If they want to try again, they have to address both of these issues simultaneously.
I desperately want a PSP3.
I've been saying it for years now, but it should:
1) Be BC with PS1, PSP, Vita games already bought digitally, and optionally Vita physical if adding a card reader is feasible price wise.
!2) Most important: Play digital PS2 games. Market it as a portable PS2, and they will come. I'm a little concerned about how the PS4 handled PS2, so I'd prefer the wider variety already available for PS3... but somehow, sort that out.
3) Improve remote play in any ways that advances in R&D allow.
4) Optionally, allow dual boot with android.
5) Suspend mode / battery life ala Vita is a must.
6) Video out plus sync with DS4, maybe DS3.
7) SD cards, obviously.
I think I prefer an Exynos SOC than a SD821.But you can go for an older chip like the 821. Which is still a very good SoC. And is now bound to be quite cheap, given that it's almost two years old.
True. The Vita's CPU/GPU run at noticeably lower speeds than their max posted.
However current SoCs are better at power conservation than older ones, meaning power consumption outside gaming is lower than in previous SoC generations. And even when downclocked they put out pretty decent performance. Besides, ultimately, a dead battery in a portable gaming device is just that. A dead battery in a phone can render you unreachable. So battery life isn't absolutely vital, as long as it's capable of at least 5 hours continuous playtime.
The SD821 has an in-built quad-channel memory controller. And it's unlikely a dedicated gaming device would come out with anything less than 4x1GB LPDDR4. So the memory bandwidth is already taken care of by the SoC manufacturer.
Is not a joke post because at the end of the day no third-party will support Sony's new portable if they make a new one. Sony really screwed up with a Vita.Joke post? I genuinely laughed.
Maybe instead of making cars. Tesla should just support their competition?
I can't wait until the Switch hype dies down because some of this Switch praising is just ridiculous.
Is not a joke post because at the end of the day no third-party will support Sony's new portable if they make a new one. Sony really screwed up with a Vita.
Because PS4 is not a portable. We are talking about Sony making a portable which will never happen. Nintendo is getting lots of support on Switch. And its selling like crazy. Something That didn't happen to any Sony Portables....and Nintendo really screwed up with the N64, Gamecube and Wii U where third parties are concerned. Do you also say that no third-party will support Nintendo's new console? Better yet, why aren't you saying that Nintendo should be making games for the PS4?
Yeah no thanks, stick to consoles please.
Being portable or not has no bearing on third parties. Last generation I could have said the same thing about third parties not supporting Nintendo on their next console and it would have had no basis in reality just as you don't know how well a new Sony portable will go. From my perspective Nintendo has blurred the lines between handheld and console and if Sony were to release a pure handheld (for cheaper) they may steal that which Nintendo willingly gave up.Because PS4 is not a portable. We are talking about Sony making a portable which will never happen. Nintendo is getting lots of support on Switch. And its selling like crazy. Something That didn't happen to any Sony Portables.
This! I still love the Vita, play it regularly and here (in Germany) you can't find a backup system new or used for a reasonable price... so if this little black thing squeaks its last tune, there will be no more portable Binding of Isaac for me and that will be the end of me!I loved the Vita, so I'd easily buy a new Sony portable, as long as it's designed well and has backwards compatibility to the digital library of the Vita.
This! I still love the Vita, play it regularly and here (in Germany) you can't find...reasonable memory card pricing...
I use the pdp trigger grips for remote play most of the time but when playing on the go it varies based on how i'm feeling. Without the grips its so sexy.. With them its a little less sexy but still nice.