I R Baboon?
baboon is a monkey in german its called Pavian, in english as far as I know baboon
Baboons okay, lions sure, but what about the salmon and bear?
Baboons okay, lions sure, but what about the salmon and bear?
Nintendo is telling you the same thing it did with the Zelda GC demo. Guess what it is?With this demo, what is Nintendo trying to tell us with the WiiU?
Right on the money! That's more than anything due to the clause you have to sign when buying a console, the one that says "you are allowed to buy only one console and one only." So the Wii owners that were tied by the contract and couldn't play PS360 games would see a huge jump in graphics.Next gen its going to be harder for MS and Sony I think we not going to see a big leap games to most they will look just a little better then what we have now, but then if they wait longer they could lose out but they not going to have that WOW look at that
Wii U get that from being first from Big N to be in HD wii owners are ready to update cant say same for PS3 and 360 owers
Excuse me for being blunt but the bold part shows you don't know what you want much less what people want. Slight visual bump? consoles are way behind in the visual department to even think that we have reached a plateau, where we are seeing diminishing returns and a "slight visual bumps" with fast stable frame rates would be more than enough.Yes, agreed. If a console released that offered a slight visual bump, higher image quality, full HD and an increased chance of achieving a stable 60FPS across the board, id be happy with that. I think that's a fairly modest set of expectations, should be achievable by the Wii U. Factor in Nintendo's first party design and, personally, id be absolutely fine with that for the forseeable future.
When I said "console of choice" I was referring to the "core", "traditional gamers" or however else you want to put it. The Wii sold crazy numbers but I think lots of gamers were burnt by the Wii. In my opinion, the Wii U has the potential to bring those people back.
Yes, agreed. If a console released that offered a slight visual bump, higher image quality, full HD and an increased chance of achieving a stable 60FPS across the board, id be happy with that. I think that's a fairly modest set of expectations, should be achievable by the Wii U. Factor in Nintendo's first party design and, personally, id be absolutely fine with that for the forseeable future.
The Wii sold crazy numbers but I think lots of gamers were burnt by the Wii. In my opinion, the Wii U has the potential to bring those people back.
Nintendo is telling you the same thing it did with the Zelda GC demo. Guess what it is?
Not much really
Right on the money! That's more than anything due to the clause you have to sign when buying a console, the one that says "you are allowed to buy only one console and one only." So the Wii owners that were tied by the contract and couldn't play PS360 games would see a huge jump in graphics.
To be fair I don't think the next Xbox will be an HD6670 as that would put the GPU behind what we know of the earlier devkits of the Wii U. It could also be that they clocked that chip beyond 1 GHz however, considering it's going to be a SoC.
Confirmed multiple times:what do we know of earlier dev kits of the wii u? you must know something i dont.
- RV770 GPU, probably RV770LE variant (I personally think it's not the final GPU)
Confirmed multiple times:
- Triple core PowerPC-based CPU
- RV770 GPU, probably RV770LE variant (I personally think it's not the final GPU)
- 1+ GB RAM, type unknown
Heard once, still unclear:
- CPU is a new architecture (confirmed somewhat by IBM press release)
- CPU is clocked > 3 GHz
- CPU has 3MB L2 cache, which is unevenly split among the cores
- 32MB of EDRAM on the GPU
- RAM is a unified chunk
We need an overall picture of the system, I'm afraid it will be crippled in bandwidth somehow, so that the excess memory isn't as useful as it should be.
And yet, 'slight visual bumps with fast stable framerates' is what PC has been delivering over consoles in the eyes of the general public. If that much. The rest is all better online. But there consoles have been making good strides to catch up.Excuse me for being blunt but the bold part shows you don't know what you want much less what people want. Slight visual bump? consoles are way behind in the visual department to even think that we have reached a plateau, where we are seeing diminishing returns and a "slight visual bumps" with fast stable frame rates would be more than enough.
Why is that? Or did you just pull a 'lol, nontendo'?WiiU won't bring those people back. These people want a solid online infrastructure that Nintendo just can't provide, one that it's also needed for the important third party offerings..
N64 was nintendo going too darn hi-tech. Basically, nintendo's ps3. Thing is, when you go 'too darn hi-tech' you're much more prone to cut corners as your BOM is already heart-attack-inducing.This isn't typical of Nintendo hardware designs. The N64 is really all that I can think of that had a significant bottleneck.
First mentioned by IGN as an "R700" and some weird Japanese website as an RV770 (wasn't convincing at that point I admit), then confirmed by lherre (presumed to be an Ubisoft developer), and subsequently confirmed by bgassassin (who knows some guy).Where is this confirmed?
It's actually not a matter of agreeing or not, it has what it hasI actually agree with the other two. Triple Power PC and 1+GB RAM seems pretty sure.
The thing that keeps nagging me is I've heard it's DDR3 though, which would cripple it.
The 32 MBs of EDRAM sounds plausible, I think. Nintendo introducing some sort of a crippling bottleneck doesn't make sense at all, and it would be hard to claim anything like that when so little is known about RAM types and bus widths.We need an overall picture of the system, I'm afraid it will be crippled in bandwidth somehow, so that the excess memory isn't as useful as it should be.
I've also heard the 32MB EDRAM thing, but also consider that a rumor for now.
First mentioned by IGN as an "R700" and some weird Japanese website as an RV770 (wasn't convincing at that point I admit), then confirmed by lherre (presumed to be Ubisoft developer), and subsequently confirmed by bgassassin.
It's actually not a matter of agreeing or not, it has what it has. I don't know why people say DDR3 would cripple it, as well-used DDR3 is much faster than the GDDR3 in the 360 for example.
The 32 MBs of EDRAM sounds plausible, I think. Nintendo introducing some sort of a crippling bottleneck doesn't make sense at all, and it would be hard to claim anything like that when so little is known about RAM types and bus widths.
First mentioned by IGN as an "R700" and some weird Japanese website as an RV770 (wasn't convincing at that point I admit), then confirmed by lherre (presumed to be an Ubisoft developer), and subsequently confirmed by bgassassin (who knows some guy).
It's actually not a matter of agreeing or not, it has what it has. I don't know why people say DDR3 would cripple it, as well-used DDR3 is much faster than the GDDR3 in the 360 for example.
The 32 MBs of EDRAM sounds plausible, I think. Nintendo introducing some sort of a crippling bottleneck doesn't make sense at all, and it would be hard to claim anything like that when so little is known about RAM types and bus widths.
Yet you are a smart guy and should know that a good spected PC offers more than a slight visual improvement. And that the status quo is affected by some sort of impasse that we have reached due too developers seeing consoles as the most profitable market.And yet, 'slight visual bumps with fast stable framerates' is what PC has been delivering over consoles in the eyes of the general public. If that much. The rest is all better online. But there consoles have been making good strides to catch up.
You don't have to put the stupid "you are a fanboy rutine" with me Blu. We have crossed words other times and even if we don't have matching viewpoints in much things, you should know by now im above fanatic bantering.Why is that? Or did you just pull a 'lol, nontendo'?
Of course the Wii U isn't going to match the 7970. If Nintendo would use DDR3 at ~1000MHz, it would indeed achieve a 30% higher bandwidth than Microsoft had in the 360. Nintendo's processor cache and GPU EDRAM are a lot bigger though. Then again, rumours hinting at 1.5GB unified RAM could mean a 50% bus width increase or that they're using a smaller bus with GDDR5. Nothing really indicates DDR3 or GDDR5 or any other type of RAM though.DDR3, the absolute fastest on wikipedia (DDR 2133) has a transfer rate of ~17GB/s if I'm understanding right (and somehow I doubt Nintendo will go with bleeding edge, but lets say they do). Now if you go dual channel you'd have ~34 GB/s, again if I'm doing it right.
360 has ~20GB/s but has the EDRAM setup, PS3 has ~40GB/s between two busses (no EDRAM), and HD 7970 has 264 GB/s. It seems to me like Wii U bandwidth would be firmly in this generation then if so.
lherre confirmed this before I was a member, so I'd be grateful if somebody else could find it. What's sure is that there's nothing indicating an RV730, except for some speculation by Digital Foundry.R700 obviously comes from the 01.net rumors and are credible, the question to me is whether RV730 or one of the beefier two RV740 or 770. I believe in RV730 until convinced otherwise. So on that note, no offense but could you point me too lherre's post on the matter? I trust bgassasin's source somewhat, but only somewhat. I trust lherre a lot though.
That might be true, but on the other hand, being ahead with an established service also has its drawbacks. Being in a position where you can look at what all those established services do or don't do well, cherry picking the best ideas and developing something new from the ground up is a great way to revolutionize. Contrary to Sony or Microsoft, Nintendo doesn't really have to worry much about compatibility or alienating customers. Not that I expect them to do something big, but with Nintendo, you never know.Nintendo can offer a kick ass online infra structure. Problem is their competitors are way ahead of them and they didn't prioritize that at an eralier time to be at least competitive. People heavily invested in online gaming don't think much about Nintendo.
Of course the Wii U isn't going to match the 7970. If Nintendo would use DDR3 at ~1000MHz, it would indeed achieve a 30% higher bandwidth than Microsoft had in the 360. Nintendo's processor cache and GPU EDRAM are a lot bigger though. Then again, rumours hinting at 1.5GB unified RAM could mean a 50% bus width increase or that they're using a smaller bus with GDDR5. Nothing really indicates DDR3 or GDDR5 or any other type of RAM though.
lherre confirmed this before I was a member, so I'd be grateful if somebody else could find it. What's sure is that there's nothing indicating an RV730, except for some speculation by Digital Foundry.
Over the last few weeks, you've argued that Nintendo should not focus on the casual market because they can't compete with Kinect, you've also called NSMBMii, WiiU Sports, WiiU Fit, and a new HD Racer an "absolutely godawful launch lineup," and have argued why those (particularly the first two) or "any existing Nintendo franchise" would be ineffective. This isn't your first go-around. You've now backpedaled your argument down "why can't they just try" backed up by nothing but a strawman and multiple accusations of being misrepresented.
What a good-specced PC can do is not the subject - the subject is, how the general public perceives that. Me, personally, I cannot wait till we finally can afford to do robust GI on our GPUs - I'm really tired of the all smoke and mirrors. And we are gradually getting there. But in the game industry, people are in to make money - things like install bases and priceranges are crucial. Technology elitism is nigh irrelevant, if not harmful.Yet you are a smart guy and should know that a good spected PC offers more than a slight visual improvement. And that the status quo is affected by some sort of impasse that we have reached due too developers seeing consoles as the most profitable market.
No offense meant. I just expect people to put more reason in their posts in this thread. Unless you jest, of course (I often do).You don't have to put the stupid "you are a fanboy rutine" with me Blu. We have crossed words other times and even if we don't have matching viewpoints in much things, you should know by now im above fanatic bantering.
Nintendo's competitors are way ahead in terms of online mindshare, not in terms of technology. Two gens ago MS stepped in with the know-how and intention to build an adequate (by PC standards) online infrastructure. They succeeded off the bat, and further solidified that over the course of the next gen. You can say it was costly, you can say building mindshare does not come overnight. But you cannot say 'vendor X can never repeat that', given vendor X (1) has the funds, and (2) appears to have the motivation this time around. Nintendo might be conservative in many aspects, but they're not idiots. They are well aware Apple has been eating console makers' lunch. Nintendo will take out their monetary guns this time, if not for MS or Sony, then for Apple. And everything we've heard so far indicates that's exactly what they're doing. In case you haven't yet, get yourself a 3DS and observe the advancements nintendo have been doing since the DS(i). Nintendo are catching up, fast.Nintendo can offer a kick ass online infra structure. Problem is their competitors are way ahead of them and they didn't prioritize that at an eralier time to be at least competitive. People heavily invested in online gaming don't think much about Nintendo.
But that works for Sony and MS also. They could retroactively add the best features that Nintendo could've come with, also establishing middle points in the relationship with third parties is a time consuming process. But anyway getting an online service it's more of an iterative process and that demands time and money more than anything else. In my limited knowledge, there's not much Nintendo could do to revolutionize an online service, it's just a matter of features, price and reliability.That might be true, but on the other hand, being ahead with an established service also has its drawbacks. Being in a position where you can look at what all those established services do or don't do well, cherry picking the best ideas and developing something new from the ground up is a great way to revolutionize. Contrary to Sony or Microsoft, Nintendo doesn't really have to worry much about compatibility or alienating customers. Not that I expect them to do something big, but with Nintendo, you never know.
THQ PR said:The company intends to accelerate digital revenues by extending and supporting key console launches, and to create dedicated digital properties for emerging platforms.
We have to keep the context here, this is the WiiU thread. So let me simplify the point to keep the discussion focused.Nintendo's competitors are way ahead in terms of online mindshare, not in terms of technology. Two gens ago MS stepped in with the know-how and intention to build an adequate (by PC standards) online infrastructure. They succeeded off the bat, and further solidified that over the course of the next gen. You can say it was costly, you can say building mindshare does not come overnight. But you cannot say 'vendor X can never repeat that', given vendor X (1) has the funds, and (2) appears to have the motivation this time around. Nintendo might be conservative in many aspects, but they're not idiots. They are well aware Apple has been eating console makers' lunch. Nintendo will take out their monetary guns this time, if not for MS or Sony, then for Apple. And everything we've heard so far indicates that's exactly what they're doing. In case you haven't yet, get yourself a 3DS and observe the advancements nintendo have been doing since the DS(i). Nintendo are catching up, fast.
Sure, but 30% higher than 360 puts it basically in this gen, not the order of magnitude needed for next gen.
For the lherre/RV770, well then I remain unconvinced. Guess I could comb his post history someday LOL.
Not if the changes alienate your userbase. Anyway, we'll see. I believe we've yet to see what the Network Service Development Department was working on for the past two years.But that works for Sony and MS also. They could retroactively add the best features that Nintendo could've come with, also establishing middle points in the relationship with third parties is a time consuming process. But anyway getting an online service it's more of an iterative process and that demands time and money more than anything else. In my limited knowledge, there's not much Nintendo could do to revolutionize an online service, it's just a matter of features, price and reliability.
Ok everyone,
I came accross that one here.
http://www.nintengen.com/2012/01/speculation-wii-u-gpu-vs-xbox-720-gpu.html
But if that is true what is written there and even if the performance differs a bit in real gaming...
Then the gpu choosen by Nintendo is very powerful isn't it??
Then we dont need to worry or?
Why is that (if true) that the performance of a newer gpu can be worse than the one of an older??
I'm confused with that...
Guys. The Wii U doesn't have a Radeon HD4850. The next Xbox won't have a Radeon HD6670. Comparing their PC counterparts isn't going to tell you anything.
Guys. The Wii U doesn't have a Radeon HD4850. The next Xbox won't have a Radeon HD6670. Comparing their PC counterparts isn't going to tell you anything.
No, they will probably be completely different. Even if the Wii U chip isn't going to be different, then definitely the Next Xbox chip will be. The comparison is useless. Development hardware is not the same as final console hardware. And the Next Xbox doesn't even have development hardware yet!I know that they are customized.
Develop also understands that a prominent UK racing studio has committed to support Wii U with one project each year.
http://mynintendonews.com/2012/01/25/wii-u-twice-as-powerful-as-xbox-360-claims-develop-source/
Fun with numbers.
Apparently on 2x as strong as the 360
http://mynintendonews.com/2012/01/25/wii-u-twice-as-powerful-as-xbox-360-claims-develop-source/
Fun with numbers.
Apparently on 2x as strong as the 360
Oh wasn't the original source, the original source had this gem as well
Develop also understands that a prominent UK racing studio has committed to support Wii U with one project each year.
I don't tend to bother with reports that the Wii U's X times as powerful, due to how completely subjective that is (if the Wii U's CPU ran at 6.4Ghz that'd put it in the crazy powerful category, whereas if the GPU has 480 SPUs at the same clock rate as Xenos that'd be well on the lower end of speculation).
However, I found this quote from the original article to be pretty interesting:
Racing-gaf, what studio could they be talking about?
Uh you should reread that article. The article states a source said it was 2x last year, and the dev kits had a significant boost but due to NDAs they cannot currently verify IGNs claim of 5x. It's implied though that Develop believes IGNs claim.http://mynintendonews.com/2012/01/25/wii-u-twice-as-powerful-as-xbox-360-claims-develop-source/
Fun with numbers.
Apparently on 2x as strong as the 360
Oh wasn't the original source, the original source had this gem as well
Uh you should reread that article. The article states a source said it was 2x last year, and the dev kits had a significant boost but due to NDAs they cannot currently verify IGNs claim of 5x. It's implied though that Develop believes IGNs claim.
yeah they even say at the end:Uh you should reread that article. The article states a source said it was 2x last year, and the dev kits had a significant boost but due to NDAs they cannot currently verify IGNs claim of 5x. It's implied though that Develop believes IGNs claim.
So they've been hearing the same as IGN, at least generally speaking.That unverified calculation, if true, echoes claims from the Develop source who claims the Wii U is far more powerful than current expectations.
Uh you should reread that article. The article states a source said it was 2x last year, and the dev kits had a significant boost but due to NDAs they cannot currently verify IGNs claim of 5x. It's implied though that Develop believes IGNs claim.
Actually the last sentence just confused the heck out of me really, but I get your point.
And that was other thing wanted to point out, is he mentions that developers are under strict NDAs so for the folks who were clamoring about Project CARS being a sign of weak 3rd party support, it seems they either didn't sign NDAs or slipped.
lol ownedSpeaking of Project CARS, the Wii U logo isn't up on the main page anymore.
remember X360 went from X800 to X1800 class from initial to final devkits. As well, 3DS got a sizeable boost from IGNs early devkit rumors to final 3DS. Always keep in mind that unreleased hardware is a moving target.A 2x to 5x jump is huge. That has to be talking about RAM. Has to be.
The Ninjas got to them.Speaking of Project CARS, the Wii U logo isn't up on the main page anymore.
The non-final devkits did >2x on graphics and could probably have done >2x on CPU. If you add all that together, you could end up with 5x more powerful. If you don't add it together, you get 2x.A 2x to 5x jump is huge. That has to be talking about RAM. Has to be.
Ninjas strike again. EDIT: beaten!Speaking of Project CARS, the Wii U logo isn't up on the main page anymore.
Speaking of Project CARS, the Wii U logo isn't up on the main page anymore.