Posts Tagged ‘graphics’

LittleBigPlanet™ Review

Friday, November 21st, 2008

Little Big PlanetIt’s one of the most hyped exclusive PLAYSTATION®3 titles ever, it’s received rave reviews from critics across the world and finally it’s landed in South Africa. The moment we got our hands on the game we were playing through the tutorials and doing our own little sack dances. Let’s delve into LittleBigPlanet™.

LittleBigPlanet™ is truly unique; to describe it using other games is almost impossible without giving you the wrong impression. You are in control of a Sackboy™, a remarkably good looking little sack person who will help you explore different locations around the LittleBigPlanet™. From the first step customisation is the main ingredient. You decide how your character looks, what it wears, its hair, eyes, and sack colour all the way to its emotions. The SIXAXIS™ wireless controller is intuitively used to bogey in the middle of the deepest Africa with crocodiles snapping at your feet or put your fists up and get ready to start a fight.

LittleBigPlanet™ is split into three main sections indicated by the planet itself and its two moons. On LittleBigPlanet™ you follow the main storyline where you will develop your sacking skills and learn that not all is well in the eight realms that you will explore. Creatures are going missing and are getting rather upset about life on the planet. It’s up to you to get to the bottom of it all. Don’t be fooled by its cute appearance, LittleBigPlanet™ has the simplicity for a newborn and complexity for Einstein. Each realm brings with it new difficulties, some of which will require the help of friends to ensure success. LittleBigPlanet™ allows for up to four players on the same PLAYSTATION®3 or you can play with strangers online.  Everything is made simple through intuitive menus that keep things flowing.

Most games stop there, and with LittleBigPlanet™ you would be satisfied with some stunning graphics, interesting levels, fun multiplayer and the amazing physics engine. But that’s only the beginning. On My Moon all the power is put into your grubby little paws. You have the power to build your own levels from scratch or from templates. Using the ingenious Popit menu you have access to the tools the creators used to make their levels. Throw in a PLAYSTATION®3 Eye and get your friends to join in. Any shape imaginable can be created, pieces can be glued, copied, shifted, sized, energised and mobilised. The only limit is the level size and your imagination.

Little Big PlanetWhen you’re done you can put your masterpiece online for the world to play, rate and determine your fate. If you’re feeling lazy, uncreative or just want to play some new or different levels then jump into LittleBigPlanet™ Online and play creations from across the globe. Everything is monitored and complaints can be sent in for dodgy content within seconds. As the creators put it, “No swearing, no rude drawings and nothing that would offend your granny” should be put up.

LittleBigPlanet™ is hours of fun but requires a large learning curve. You have to learn what all the different tools do, and how to use them. That’s where Stephen Fry, The Voice for The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, comes in. He will teach you step by step, every little thing possible on LittleBigPlanet™. His sense of humour works beautifully with the game and takes it’s entertainment value to a new level. Any game that requires so many tutorials would normally cause people to go insane, but with Stephen Fry learning is simple and entertaining. In fact when you’re finished learning you’ll miss it, leaping to attention when you hear his voice.

The real question is will South Africans be willing to fork out their hard earned cash for a PS3 and LittleBigPlanet™? They should, but with the world in an economic panic they may ignore the stunning ingenuity and settle for a cheap entertainment fix.

Presentation

Everything just syncs so well, making the complete package stunning to say the least.

10
Graphics

The graphics are beautiful, you want to reach out and feel the textures.

9.5
Sound

Unique and interesting, although expect it to annoy parents if put too loud.

8
Gameplay

Controlling the three planes could have been better and on smaller screens you sometimes battle to see what’s going on especially when four people spread out on the screen. But overall the package is brilliant, especially when creating and editing levels.

9
Lasting Appeal

Besides the hidden goodies all over the story mode the user-created content will keep you going for a long time.

9.5
Overall (not an average) 9

Windows Vista Review

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Windows VistaAfter using Vista for almost a year I am now in a reasonable position to critique it. As with most software, time is needed to fix start-up kinks and iron out any small problems. Their time is up.

Many people have criticised Vista on many levels. The fact that a full hardware upgrade is often necessary, it was missing many critical drivers and it didn’t have full backwards compatibility, gave critics the ammunition they needed to destroy perceptions of Vista before it had really gotten off the ground.

After almost a years use I could not go back to XP. Vista is different but essentially simpler. Finding files and documents is quick and easy, the control panel is even easier to use after a while, and it looks very nice. On a fast enough computer Vista runs smoothly and easily, loading times over the year have become shorter and it adapts to my computer needs.

My favourite positive on Vista is that when something goes wrong, Vista not only reports the problem to Microsoft but it reports back when a solution is found. Something that simple makes a huge difference when faced with a problem that could take hours of research to fix. If there is an official fix, you will be notified almost immediately and be able to correct it.

Although Vista has gotten some undue criticism a lot of it is warranted. Visible bugs are still apparent; I always get errors with video drivers and .avi (video) files. And to add insult to injury my graphics card is supposedly Vista compatible. Just two days ago, after months of no major problems, I received a blue screen and the computer had to restart. I was surfing the internet when it happened which hardly drains any resources.

Although Vista does have some great updates and improvements over XP which I can no longer use a computer without, its continuous bugs and random crashes are unacceptable. This after a year on the market place and service pack one released. If Microsoft wants to keep its huge share from the seemingly always working, always better and simpler Apple, then it’s going to have to step up its game. If it wasn’t for their large XP following and people’s lack of Apple knowledge, they would not be doing very well right now.