Adam Corn Sep 28, 2010
So did anybody take the plunge on this?
I tried it out at TGS with Virtua Tennis 4 / Power Smash 4. I was playing the setup in 3D as well, though as usual the 3D effect didn't do much for me.
The Move controller itself though did very much impress me. The lighter weight makes it much more comfortable to handle than the Wiimote, as does the more contoured design. Having not yet tried the Wii MotionPlus upgrade, the extremely precise controls when rotating the Move controller/racket were almost as much a revolution as the initial experience with the Wii itself. I really wished I'd had more time with the demo to try to get a handle on topspin and backspin. (Normal shots that would at least land somewhere in the court were fairly effortless to achieve.)
Being able to move forward and back with actual physical motion was an interesting twist as well (I'm assuming the Playstation Eye makes this possible). The on-screen movement forward and back didn't always correspond as quickly as I'd like but that may have been a software issue. It would be *very* interesting if they somehow made physical lateral movement possible as well. If they really want to give people a workout playing PS3, that would be the way.
So yeah, the Move feels and controls great. The question is whether the "core gamers" that make up most of the PS3's market are going to bother paying extra for motion controls, and whether the casual gamers that made Wii a huge success are going to spend $400 for an upgrade or for their first motion-gaming purchase.
I think it's going to be a fairly niche accessory - along the lines of the Eye itself - until the complete hardware package comes down to the $250 dollar range. And one has to wonder whether by that point software developers will still be sticking with it.