This one seems to be going under the radar, but I'm looking forward to Crave's Pinball Hall of Fame which is supposed to be out by the end of the month:
http://www.gamespot.com/psp/puzzle/pinballhalloffame/news.html?sid=6136881
12 Gottlieb pinball machines recreated, sounds like game sharing can be used for any table, and it even lets you display the table vertically on the screen. Looks pretty good in screens:
Ngage perhaps got a higher ratio of ridicule to compliments, as compared to the PSP, but it certainly doesn't match the PSP for sheer volume of ridicule - the canaries have been chirping away with healthy vigor on that front since the PSP was announced at E3 2003. Sometimes its hard to remember, in the midst of all that racket, that its actually a good sign. But then, like I mentioned in the first place, you have to remind yourself what happened with a product like the Tapwave Zodiac.
http://www.gamespot.com/psp/puzzle/pinballhalloffame/news.html?sid=6136881
12 Gottlieb pinball machines recreated, sounds like game sharing can be used for any table, and it even lets you display the table vertically on the screen. Looks pretty good in screens:
Of course the scenario could still happen to the PSP (short-lived success) and in that situation you'd accordingly see the level of passionate disdain drop off. I didn't infer that it was a "stabilizing factor" of any kind, merely an indicator - the canary in a coal mine for just about any new product.callous said:Uhm, yes, exactly. That scenario could still happen with the PSP (or the DS, I guess).
As for something like Ngage, I mentioned it because it certainly got its share of ridicule without ever really arriving. Much more than PSP.
My point is, trying to turn the dislike of the PSP into something positive, a stabilising factor even, doesn't make much logical or historical sense.
Ngage perhaps got a higher ratio of ridicule to compliments, as compared to the PSP, but it certainly doesn't match the PSP for sheer volume of ridicule - the canaries have been chirping away with healthy vigor on that front since the PSP was announced at E3 2003. Sometimes its hard to remember, in the midst of all that racket, that its actually a good sign. But then, like I mentioned in the first place, you have to remind yourself what happened with a product like the Tapwave Zodiac.
