|
Nintendo's one-handed joypad
Wider appeal
Mr Iwata said the controller resembled a remote control because that device was familiar to so many people.
"Its intuitive form allows both experienced and new gamers to stand on the same starting line," he said during his keynote address at the show.
Mr Iwata said the Revolution controller and console was aimed at converting new users to gaming who were scared off by the fast pace of existing games.
"If we can't do that, we might as well stand back and watch the market die off," he said.
The wireless sensor-studded controller is a break with the past because before now most game consoles have used a two-handed device studded with buttons.
The Revolution's controller can be used to fight with on-screen weapons such as swords or control vehicles and characters but was also capable of representing quite delicate movements, said Mr Iwata.
Three-way battle
During the demonstration during Mr Iwata's speech, the controller was seen being used by players to conduct an on-screen orchestra, play a virtual musical instrument and even use an in-game dentists' drill.
The slim controller can be used one-handed or can be fitted with an extension cord that links it to a familiar thumb-controlled joystick.
Nintendo's Revolution console will be released in 2006 but it is likely to appear after launches by rivals Microsoft and Sony.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/technology/4251720.stm
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Are you looking for :
123webguru.com, A new web division of Microsec
Technologies Ltd. |
|
|