MizzouRah wrote:Had my brother, sister, and my neighbors over last night.. two more kinects are being picked up today, they are sold on it.
Again, I'm really surprised at how good each of these games are, sports, dance central, adventures, kinectamals..
My wife bought Just Dance 2 for the family on the Wii and after we tried to have fun with it.. we both said, this is lame let's put Dance Central back in and play the kinect.
There is something about playing games without any controllers that really ups the fun factor!
Yep. I'm really looking forward to a solid boxing simulator, as well as picking up some other solo type sports games. We just have Adventures and Dance Central right now. And I'm just not a Dance Central kind of guy. But the wife and daughter had insane amounts of fun playing it.
I still suspect that golf and bowling will be more suited to motion controllers. I have to believe the slight twists the produce the spin in bowling and slices and hooks in golf will be better simulated with that controller in hand.
Big picture, I still wonder if the Kinect can generate the same kind of revenue was the Wii as a peripheral. If it lags much at all, it will affect future development. They can still only sell games to a % of 360 owners ( the move has the same limitation). But a Wii game goes to 100% of Wii owners. It will be interesting to see how software sales start to stack up.
But for me personally, having it as a peripheral is perfect. Instead of having every 360 game forced into Kinect, I get the best of both worlds. So while the Kinect got a lot of love this weekend, so did Assassin's Creed and Rock Band 3. The 360 has really become an amazing hub of great ways to consume media. I watched basketball on ESPN via the 360. I watched some TV via Netflix and Zune. We played Kinect and regular video games.
Other than some core franchises, the Wii just became irrelevant in our house. I'd say the lackluster epic Mickey just highlighted just how out of tune the Wii is.