XBOX on its way to winning the consoles war

05 June 2009

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Wii MotionPlus will make the Wii better. Sony’s very impressive motion control demo will be better than Wii MotionPlus. But Microsoft stole E3 and may have already won the motion control wars with the announcement of project Natal.
Keep in mind, the name “Natal”—referring to a city in Brazil—doesn’t really do the platform’s infancy any justice. It should really be called “Project Prenatal,” as the peripheral’s dev kits just shipped to the first set of developers this week.
Keep in mind, the name “Natal”—referring to a city in Brazil—doesn’t really do the platform’s infancy any justice. It should really be called “Project Prenatal,” as the peripheral’s dev kits just shipped to the first set of developers this week.

For a Motion System It Facilitates Passive Entertainment


People are lazy. If we can use a remote instead of changing a channel on the television five feet away, we’ll use a remote. And I’d argue that if we can login to our preferred entertainment by just sitting on the couch (through Natal’s facial recognition), we’ll do that next. Is talking or gesturing more simple than channel surfing on a remote? Not necessarily, but…

Voice Recognition Is Still Promising Technology

Just because we haven’t managed to perfect voice recognition doesn’t mean we should write it off in every product into the future. It’s getting better all the time, helped by increased processing power, and once you integrate voice into a system, it allows you to jump deeper into any tree of menus than most UIs allow. For instance, on an iPod, you have to navigate through a handful of separate screens to get to a particular artist. With voice recognition, you’d just say that artist’s name.

Natal Can Support Peripherals Too, You Stupid, Stupid Idiots


If there was one thing I couldn’t stand hearing again and again at E3, it was that Natal would force all gamers to mime controls in every game. Not true—at least, not for any reason made clear to me. Programmers would be free to include all kinds of controllers should they chose to. And if Natal’s cameras are tracking 48 points on your body in 3D space, and its software can distinguish you from various non-human objects, I find it hard to believe that you couldn’t hold an actual steering wheel to play a racing game, if you wanted to. Personally, I’ve grown a bit sick of tripping over plastic controllers in my living room, but I’m sure that third-party devs and hardware manufacturers will be happy to integrate and sell all the acrylic modular baseball bats you can stand.

Natal Can’t Cost More Than a Party’s Worth of Wiimotes

No one knows what Natal will cost. But you know what? I doubt it will cost more than $242, the amount a Wii owner needs to spend to outfit their console with controllers for four people. Microsoft was not specific as to the number of gamers supported simultaneously in Natal’s multiplayer (to be fair, we haven’t seen the system fully tracking wireframes beyond two people at a time). But a future in which a console’s price isn’t doubled by its peripherals sounds pretty appealing to us.

Natal Tracks 48 Points, Nintendo and Sony Track 1, Maybe 2 Points

Sony’s Wiimote-like demo was the best physically-based motion tracking I’d ever seen. It was pretty freaking impressive to watch augmented reality replaced Sony’s controller with a sword, whip and even bow and arrow. But even with two controllers, Sony and Nintendo’s systems are really only tracking two single objects (perfectly) in space. So when you are swinging that sword with so much flourish, the human figure is just an arbitrary placeholder. How will you dodge? Or should I say, how will you feel like you’re dodging? The D-pad, I can almost guarantee. OK…so how will you kick?

Natal Would Be Too Good To Be True…In Nintendo or Sony’s Hands

Other companies could (and have) made infrared body-tracking cameras. Why are we so confident in Natal? Aside from our positive hands-on experience, Natal has Microsoft middleware/dev tools behind it. Where few third parties have wielded the Wiimote with as much finesse as Nintendo, and Sony is traditionally mute on how companies can unlock the power of their complicated hardware architecture, Microsoft launches Xbox products with the software necessary to make them work. Oh, and Microsoft is approaching Natal with 100% earnestness, calling the platform “the endgame.” Sony’s motion control, according to Sony, is less important.

Also, if you haven’t seen Lee’s video showing off the potential of headtracking in displays, do so right now. Why? Because I’m all but positive that headtracking is one of many unannounced features in Natal that will change the way we think of 3D, without a 3D display.

I don’t know that Natal will render the PS3’s motion controls (or Nintendo’s new Wii MotionPlus) completely worthless overnight. I do think there’s a level of speed and accuracy (60 fps!) with which Sony will be able to duplicate a good old blunt instrument, possibly even better than Natal. (Then again, no one has actually played Sony’s prototype.)

But an idea as bold as Project Natal, in the hands of Microsoft, which has been on its game, so to speak, with the 360…yeah, it took E3 in my book. And next year, when there are some actual games to see on the platform, it damn well might take E3 again. [Project Natal on Gizmodo]

5 Responses »

  1. Can someone please convince me to buy a xbox? give me reasons to purchase an xbox that aren’t: ”better online” – p2p gaming will be the similar everywhere, twitter and netflx are nothing. ”better” games – ps3 gets the similar as xbox and others i cant play on PC improved graphics – multiplatform games are mostly the identical

  2. frankly speaking, both of these consoles are pretty much the same when it comes to raw power (although the PS3 is undoubtedly the best) this however does not gurantee a better gaming experience. Take a clear example of the nintendo Wii. it hardly packs a puch in its hardware, yet it is in the competition with these two giants. it is a question of what a console can do, rather than how it does it. The XBOX 360 has many good titles under its belt and it is way cheaper than the PS3. But what will make a person chose one over the other is entirely a matter of personal taste.

  3. Lets not forget that the playstation3 also plays blue ray dvds, and it certainly looks better in the living room than the xbox 360. but I agree with admin, the ps3 is more expensive

  4. The Xbox Kinect is more than just a family games console, I meanyou can do a lot more stuff that you can’t do with the Wii. The graphics are better and the Hard Drive storage on the new Xbox is far superior to the Wii. There is no need for controllers which meansless battery and recharging cost. If you have a young family like I do, you don’t have to worry about the kids misusing the controllers or dropping them in there juice. Kinect does have voice recognition so if the kids are getting out of order and reality wrestling rather than virtual wrestling you can just yell pause and Kinect will pause. Shamethis doesn’t generally work with the kids, well not in my house anyway. There is no doubt your whole family will have a lot of fun with the Kinect and it is taking interactive gaming to a whole newlevel. I have to admit , Microsoft were lagging behind a bit recently in the games console world and it’s about time they stepped up to the plate and with Xbox Kinect, they have done exactly that in my opinion. Whether it has bugs or little minor problems remains to be seen and as with all these things, the proof is in the ongoing sales rather than the initial sales onslaught of inquisitive techno-holics who buy any new gadget released.

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