DWT sites: DWT | Gadget Shop! | WeTokyo Friendfinder | Jobs | Eigo Factory | Make your iPhone App Big in Japan


TGS: Getting to grips with the PS3
September 22nd, 2006

060922_PS3_boxes.JPG

For most gamers this year’s Tokyo Game Show is the first opportunity to get their hands on the gaming console that’s guaranteed to become one of this holiday season’s hot-ticket items. Yes, it’s the Sega Drea… sorry; the PlayStation 3.

Although the PS3 has already been shown in prototype form at various trade events like E3 for more than a year now, most sightings have been of development kits only, so it was a long-anticipated moment when I finally grasped a real PS3 at the show this morning.

060922_Minna_no_golf.JPG

Naturally, the biggest draw was Sony’s own booth, where around a dozen home-spun games where playable, with several more on display for eye-candy value alone. The standout titles drawing most attention from the huge first-day crowds of journalists, exhibitors and assorted hangers-on were Gran Turismo HD (being demoed in mock-ups of sports-car cockpits) and Minna no Golf 5 (Everybody’s Golf 5, above), a fun golfing game that looked remarkably similar to the versions already available for other platforms.

060922_Power_Smash_5_B.JPG

Away from the SCEI stand, Sega had the best lineup of games for the PS3. The outstanding title there was clearly Power Smash 3 (above), a tennis game in full 1080p high-definition that makes it appear closer to a simulation than a traditional game.

Hi-def gaming may take some getting used to, however. Between-point close-ups of James Blake’s shaven head, for example, were more than a little off-putting. Scratching beneath the surface, actual game play was surprisingly simple and easy to grasp; perhaps a little too simple.

Other Sega standards were also out in impressive force. These included Virtua Fighter 5 and Sega Golf Club. The former game could hardly fail to impress, with detailed renditions of blizzards of sakura cherry blossom falling from background trees and realistic-looking Japanese temples adding to the atmosphere. Sega’s golf title, on the other hand, looked slightly dated, especially when compared to the SCEI offering.

Finally, not all PS3 games on show were complete. One of the most interesting games still on the drawing board, but available to lust over, was previewed under the working title of Lair and is surely the first high-definition fire-breathing dragon-riding game for any console.

05:56 PM Mark Hiratsuka • Permalink
Add a comment | More DWT | Get a cool job in Japan! | Follow us on Twitter

Date much?


Japanese gadgets from Tokyo Zakka!Perfect gifts for your nerdiest friends back home!

C'mon - let's hear it...

Spammers beware: Any links in comments to commercial websites will be treated as paid advertising and will be charged at rate of $10 per link per day. Invoices will be sent to the idiots who hire you for so-called SEO jobs. All you good people will always keep it real, of course - thanks!

Support Our Sponsors:


  • Android Tablet