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Nerve-Damage
12-27-2006, 01:14 PM
The Designer's Notebook: PS3 versus Wii - The Designer's Perspective (http://www.gamasutra.com/features/20061222/adams_01.shtml)

Forgive me if this was posted already.

So now we’re at another generation. The Xbox 360 came out swinging early, and it’s a good solid machine. Then there’s the PS3, which is undoubtedly the most powerful game console ever built but too expensive, and the Wii, which has taken a radically different approach. Who’ll end up as the also-ran?

There’s no question that more computing power enables us to do things that we couldn’t otherwise do. We can put more characters on the screen; we can put more brains in their heads. We can use CPU-intensive techniques like inverse kinematics to create better animation, especially interactions between characters in games that involve a lot of physical contact such as wrestling or rugby. Our physics and visual effects will be both spectacular and accurate. In short, the PS3 is a programmer’s and a filmmaker’s dream. If you’re a visual thinker, if much of the entertainment that you provide is through the richness or the verisimilitude of your imagery, then there’s no question that the PS3 is the way to go.

The PS3 is another step in a long chain of graphical and computing improvements that began with Spacewar. It’s a big step, and technically speaking, the inclusion of the Cell processor is a very important – and challenging – innovation. Most game programmers don’t know much about multiprocessing. The PS3 raises the bar, and to get the most out of it requires some high-level wizardry.

From a design standpoint, however, the PS3 is evolutionary, not revolutionary. It doesn’t change much about our job. It makes it easier to design the same stuff we’ve always designed, but it doesn’t encourage us to try anything particularly new.

So who, at the end of the day, will be the also-ran in this generation of consoles? On the global scale, I’d say it could well be neither the PS3 or the Wii, but the Xbox 360. The PS3 will win over the hardcore gamers who have to have the fastest, most amazing machine available. The Wii will skim off the younger players and those who don’t have as much money to spend.

Both have the advantage of being made in Japan, so they’ll crowd the Xbox right out of that market. In the US and Europe, it’s harder to say, but I see the Xbox’s early start as more of a liability than a benefit. They’ve racked up several million sales, but they can no longer claim to be the latest, greatest thing – especially as the PS3 plays Blu-Ray disks out of the box, but HD-DVD is only available for the Xbox as an add-on. The Dreamcast got an early start too, and look how that ended.

Garfunkel
12-27-2006, 01:37 PM
You simply can't compare the wii to the ps3, they are both entirely differnt systems focused at entirely different target markets with different socio-economic positions. The ps3 and the 360 are mostly comparable and i would consider them direct competitors.

Applefiend
12-27-2006, 02:05 PM
Yeah, Wii is a console not intended for the people who have consoles now. If you have XBox/PS2/GC and want a machine that's a huge upgrade for your cash, that ain't Wii. You're laying down you cash for a machine that in some ways is inferior to your Xbox(No XBox Live, DVD Playback, 10Gb Hard drive, Dolby Digital), but... It wasn't intended for the guys who are XBox crazy. It's the casual gaming machine. nothing wrong with casual gaming, the Wii is going to be the star of my upcoming BBQ. :)

I personally feel there will be a Wii fad bubble, which at some point will burst, leaving 360 and PS3 to fight it out until 2010 when the first sniffs of XBox 720/PS4 will come. That's not to say there won't be a Wii 2 by then.

Todays shock, youtube on Wii > youtube on PS3 browser!!!!

Z
12-28-2006, 05:07 AM
You simply can't compare the wii to the ps3, they are both entirely differnt systems focused at entirely different target markets with different socio-economic positions. The ps3 and the 360 are mostly comparable and i would consider them direct competitors.
though there are reasons for some to think that, keep in mind that they are still fundamentally consoles for playing games. some even throw in PC as a competitor, let alone another 'console'.

regardless of difference in price or specs, these are still 'game consoles' and thus will ultimately compete in the same market. such as any handheld 'game' system will compete in the same 'handheld gaming market' regardless of price, specs or looks.

the 'differences' each product has is simply what differentiates it from the rest, be that in design, marketing, accessibility or any other aspect.

PS. the other focus of PS3 which is being a BD player may be irrelevant in this situation since in that case it wouldn't be looked upon or purchased with other 'game consoles' in mind, but other HD players.