This is music to my ears:
"The DualShock 4 is so tight with improved shoulder buttons, it was easy to notice that there was literally no controller lag which is something the PS3 version suffers from with my TV in Game mode (zero lag gaming setting)."
Edit: The cross-buy news is cool too, but...
Same here, I can't even come close to keeping up. I have over 50 titles that I "own" but haven't played yet (most were freebies, but not all :confused:).
Reading some comment about E3 on Gamespot, the most popular nickname seems to be XBone.
Some have suggested that the "Bone" stands for MS execs being boneheads, but both MS and Sony officials have denied being that clever..
I don't think there's any real answer for that, clearly its possible. The real question is whether their focus has already move to the next-gen versions, which I would actually be ok with. If living with what we have now for another 6+ months means we will have an epic game ready for PS4...
It looks like FS has been making some selected edits to the leaderboards, but still not deleting all of the obvious bogus scores. I see names like "Database_Error" and "OK WE WILL" where other things used to be.
Yes, and the other specs aren't looking too shabby either:
https://secure.webassets.scea.com/pscomauth/groups/public/documents/webasset/feb21/pdf/playstation4_specification.pdf
You know what could help you decide if you should do that or not right? ;)
All joking aside I don't think there's anything wrong with this poll at all. Over 50 people have voted so obviously I'm not alone in that sentiment.
Also - did I mention Family Guy is really good? If I didn't mention...
I don't think South Park is that bad either. Its not great by any means but I'd certainly play it for free. When they had one at a local restaurant I used to stop and play it occasionally, and that's with having to put money in!
That was my mistake. I was thinking that 3D printing could be more efficient for mass-producing unique playfield pieces than creating a bunch of new molds for each table, but if it takes hours per piece then it wouldn't be.
It should reduce the cost of mass-producing the various playfield components quite a bit if nothing else. I'm not familiar enough with the overall process of manufacturing pinball machines to know what the breakdown is between R&D costs vs production costs. If its heavy on the production side...
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