Friday, March 21, 2008
Next generation games review for XBox 360 Playstation and Wii - Gran Turismo 5 - Prologue - Rainbow Six Vegas 2 +
Next generation games review
Screaming down a hairpin, taking out the trash and playing tennis with a hedgehog and a monkey, I have been working my thumbs to bone tracking down some of the best games soon to hit the shelves.
Gran Turismo 5 - Prologue
Decent exclusive PS3 titles have been fairly thin on the ground so far, but finally we are starting to see some of the games we were promised when the machine launched.
Power sliding onto Sony's PlayStation 3 console comes the oft-delayed Gran Turismo 5 - Prologue.
The full version of the game is due out in 2009 in the UK and late 2008 in the US and Japan but a cut-down version is being released in late March to whet the appetite of the franchise's fans.
In the early version there are 71 motors to choose from and high-definition visuals that make previous incarnations of GT look like the crude scrawls of an infant.
Rainbow Six Vegas 2
PS3-exclusive titles might be a bit thin on the ground, but there are plenty of games which are available for both the PS3 and Microsoft's XBox 360.
This game rather explosively falls into this category, and has set its laser sight on Call of Duty 4's crown as top first-person shooter.
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six team is back for another pop at taking out the bad guys in Sin City. The plot behind this shooter makes the Die Hard movies seem cerebral, and basically involves dispatching hordes of balaclava-clad bad guys.
But it is the ability to direct your AI-controlled team to do your every spec-ops bidding that makes this title so much fun.
Sega Superstars Tennis
This is another all formats title for those who will be left with a headache after all those screeching tyres and booming guns. Perhaps the cartoonish charms of Sega Superstars Tennis will soothe their aching head.
In this game, classic Sega characters such as Sonic the Hedgehog and the big-eared simian from Monkey Ball limber up for a tennis title with a twist.
Characters can perform special moves, obstacles can be introduced to the court, and the whole thing feels a million miles away from most of the dark and gloomy titles dominating contemporary gaming.
Wii Fit
If Nintendo has its way we will all be cancelling our gym memberships and getting fit with the help of its videogames console and a weird bit of plastic that you stand on.
With the aid of the balance board peripheral, Wii Fit puts the user through a series of exercises in the comfort of their living room.
Stand on the board and the Wii measures how much exercise the user is doing.
These exercises range from Yoga tasks, to weird imaginary hula hoop competitions, to daily fitness tests that can be saved and the progress viewed via the power of onscreen diagrams.
More on this BBC story here