ENGLISH
What's
In a Game?
Fonte
: www.wired.com
Way,
way back in January, a company called 3DO publicly
opened its doors with the promise of a revolutionary
new "interactive multi-player" that, among
other things, would revolutionize the video game
market. We were promised by none other than CEO
Trip Hawkins that there would be "half a dozen"
manufacturers of this miracle box and plenty of
titles by the time Christmas rolled around. Well,
Halloween is behind us and the Christmas shopping
season is relentlessly here. Has he delivered?
Yes
and no. As of October, partner Panasonic is selling
the 3DO Multiplayer for a cool US$699, and they're
even bundling it with the thoughtfully titled Crash
and Burn, a car shoot-'em-up from star 3DO developer
Crystal Dynamics. But so far there are no other
manufacturers, and 3DO is only promising about ten
titles at rollout, with "twenty by Christmas."
If you're a last-minute shopper, you're in luck.
Meanwhile
Nintendo, Sega, Atari, and Commodore, a few pretenders
to the amusement throne, have all made reservations
at the Christmas feast. Chief Spoiler award goes
to Nintendo, which is hoping to dowse the 3DO hype
with the announcement of "Project Reality,"
a US$250, 64-bit, 100-MIPS game machine based on
SGI-chip technology. The only problem: It won't
be out until 1995. "We have a two- to three-year
head start," says 3DO Senior VP of Marketing
Robert Faber.
Sega
isn't pre-announcing any hardware (although any
kid who hasn't heard rumors of the 32-bit Saturn
machine hasn't been getting out enough), but it
is pushing its year-old CD system with several "groundbreaking"
interactive video titles, including Switch, starring
Deborah "Blondie" Harry and Corey "Lost
Boys" Haim. Also coming in time for Christmas:
the much-anticipated Sonic CD game which, coupled
with a new Sonic cartoon series, should push half
a million new Sega CD systems into American living
rooms.
And
two hoary but persistent gaming companies have pulled
up seats to the Christmas table: Once-dominant Atari
Games will sell its powerful (but software-scarce)
new Jaguar system in test markets (New York and
San Francisco), and Commodore (creators of the Amiga
and the unsuccessful CDTV format) is rolling out
the Amiga CD32, a 32-bit game console, which, we
were promised us back in September, would include
at least 30 titles in time for the Christmas season.
So
which should you buy? If you have kids, the answer
will be obvious: the one they think is the coolest.
If you don't have kids, you might want to wait for
the after-Christmas fire sales. With all these machines
on the market, there's bound to be excess inventory.
- John Battelle