Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Wii is FUBAR

Yeah, as the title says, my Wii is down for the count due to some weird artifacts showing up on the screen. Once I get my UPS return ship label from Nintendo I will be mailing it back for a repair/replacement.

Sad, but what can you do?

Maybe now would be a good time to start Ribbit King or play more Ikaruga on my Gamecube.

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Friday, February 15, 2008

Dear Nintendo: What the Hell?

Most people know that I am an unashamed Nintendo fanboy. It was a love affair which, like for many, started back in the days of the NES. While I did not have the console until the days of the SNES I still adored playing the Nintendo PlayChoice-10 at my local Price Chopper back when every store needed to have a video game and I always had to be pried away from the NES at Sears.

For some reason this love affair never really stopped. Perhaps it was the nostalgia for the characters of Mario, Luigi, Link and Zelda et. all which had me rooting for the SNES above the Genesis even though I did appreciate Sonic for what he was. I stuck it out through the grim N64 years yet eventually strayed away from Nintendo when I bought a used Dreamcast which is the only non-Nintendo console for which I held the same level of acclaim. I eventually came back buying my first new console, an Indigo Gamecube.

The Gamecube was and still is a crown jewel in terms of Nintendo innovation and game design. While the Wii captures in casual gamers to play Wii Sports and reaching a mass appeal not seen really since the days of the Atari 2600 I feel the Gamecube really personified why many of us stuck with the big N when others were switching to Sony or Microsoft.

Of course this is all sentimental prologue to the topic at hand which is the Gamecube controller. I love this controller. While the NES, SNES, Genesis and Saturn (non dinner plate version) are all fine controllers the Gamecube really was the best. I never really loved the Dual Shock but I appreciate that it is functional while the X-Box controllers just sucked. If the Cube had anything going for it, it was the fact that they had the best controller on the market. So naturally I was delighted when Nintendo said of Smash Brothers on the Wii that we should not throw out our Gamecube controllers just yet.

I ended up having three Cube controllers during the console's regular lifespan. Multi-player never seemed to top three at a time for me and rarely above two. I am relatively careful with my video game controllers so they lasted me well for the life of the system. I figured that when the time came I'd simply have to buy maybe one or two new controllers from Nintendo and have enough for a four player Smash Bros. Brawl match and then some.

Of course, what happens? Well everything, really. My indigo controller develops an unresponsive analog stick, the black one gets its cable nicked and repaired with electrical tape and the orange one ended up having a twisted up cable due to the cables being improperly wound by my sisters. While the latter two aren't a huge deal, I was at least down a controller, at least for games where tight analog control is needed.

So, about a month before Christmas off I went to the store in search of a new Gamecube controller. I figured since I had a Wii I may as well get a Wavebird to keep with the wireless setup I had going in the living room. To my surprise while Wal*Mart, Target and Gamestop all had Gamecube related items in stock with the former stocking new consoles and the latter stocking used there were no Wavebirds or even new Nintendo brand controllers in sight. Figuring it was just a holiday stocking issue I took my ventures online only to find that not only was the Wavebird canceled but Nintendo decided to cut production of Gamecube Controllers down to just one color, Platinum.

What discourages me is the fact that Nintendo decided to require Gamecube controllers for Gamecube games on the Wii and offer support it for Virtual Console games as well as many new Wii games such as Mario Kart Wii and Smash Bros and they pull something like this. So I decided that I may as well give a third party controller a shot. My first choice was Gamestop branded Mad Catz wireless Micro controller which I found to be more than adequate for most games. Of course, after one day I was back to Gamestop exchanging it for a working one. I ended up with one that worked and after buying my second one the first one (the exchanged one) ended up dying on me as well.

So I figured, what the heck, I'll get a Nintendo branded one. Well after firing up my search engine and checking eBay I found that there are many Chinese made controllers from unknown companies with controllers that look exactly the same as the Nintendo ones for $10! Granted they are probably made by eight year olds and may crap out on me long before the Gamecube does, I'm sold for now.

Plus upon opening them up I see they are pretty darn close to the originals as spare parts. Looks like that Spice controller may get a new cord sooner than later. Also, as luck would have it, I found a fully functional used Wavebird with an analog stick (just the rubber part) in need of replacement and 10 minutes with a screwdriver and a $10 Chinese pad and it's good as new. Now I just gotta see if I can transfer the cords as easily. That might require some soldering.

One other note, upon opening them up I noticed they had PCB points for Turbo and Slow functions so these may be the same boards as another style of Third party pad. Perhaps one day I will probe into these functions more.

So I'll see how these go for now. I do plan on buying a Platinum Gamecube controller one of these days but I also have that plan of doing a fully modded Cube with a region switch and a custom color scheme so a couple Chinese controllers might just be what I'm looking for for now.

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Friday, February 8, 2008

Mid-Core?

Well, if labels are your thing there appears to be a new one out there: Mid-core gamers. Apparently fed up with the thirteen year old wankers playing Halo 3 et. all a group of people, lead by Jeff Fulton over at 8BitRocket.com. they decided that the labels of casual gamer and hardcore gamer didn't apply to them and that they were somewhat in the middle. While I found his blog post insightful and certainly very interesting, I'm not sure that it really applies to me either.

The video game world, much like any other hobby has its stereotypes. They have the "hardcore" gamer who owns an XBox 360 or PS3. He buys titles on release day and spends untold amounts of time trying to get to perfection in Halo or some other such FPS or they level up in Warcraft or some other MMORPG working their magic.

Casual gamers, on the other hand are viewed as people who buy games for the novelty of it and are more apt to play games such as Boogie or Wii Sports. The hardcore gamers seem to show disgust at them and their choice in games.

So where do I fit in? Well, I really have no idea. I know a lot of my friends tell me I lean towards the hardcore side yet the label just doesn't fit for me. First, while I loved Starcraft in high school I never put the hours into honing my skills like some of my classmates did and thus I usually lost unless I was on their team. World of Warcraft and Halo are both a collosal waste of time in my view and I am looking forward to trying out Professor Layton and the Curious Village once I get a DS.

Yet I'm no casual either. While Wii Play is fun for parties and when some friends are over, I hardly ever play it. If I want pick up and play I fire up Kid Icarus or Super Mario Brothers 2 (the Japanese version.) While Wii sports is fantastic and I love boxing I could never see myself just owning games like that on my Wii.

So what do I like? Well on the casual side I did actually enjoy Furu Furu Park as a fun timewaster for $20. This week I picked up P.N.03 and Mega Man Network Transmission for a fiver each. I have plenty of puzzle games with Dr. Mario and Puyo Puyo being my absolute favorites. On the hardcore side of things my current favorite Wii game is Metroid Prime 3 and I'm currently working on playing through Wind Waker once again.

So I suppose to many I probably lean towards the casual side of things. If that's the way they want to label me, fine. Just don't expect me to buy those worthless Nerf attachments for Wii Sports. No, I'll be having fun with my Zelda games and biding my time until I get my mitts on Smash Bros Brawl, Baroque, Tales of Symphonia 2 etc.

Either way, labels suck.

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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Zelda obcession ...

So it's no secret that my favorite video games are with few exceptions from Nintendo. It then comes as no surprise that I am a big fan of the Zelda series despite never finishing Ocarina of Time or Twilight Princess.

Well, seeing as how the weather here doesn't look the hottest (and honestly I have some free time) I decided that I will work on rectifying that. In the next few days and weeks I will be working on not one, two or even three but FIVE Zelda games.

I started playing Zelda II: The Adventure of Link on Monday. So far I've beaten just the first Palace. For some reason I never really played this game and so far I can understand why many Zelda fans don't like it or reject it outright. The game is just so different from all the other incarnations that that when the series returned to its topdown roots.

I'll post more on this one as I play it more.

I also started a new game of Wind Waker. This game I absolutely love and have chalked up dozens of hours in it the first time it came out. Heck, this was the game I bought the Gamecube for!

So far I've just gone through the opening movies and got my green clothes. Darn dinner got in the way.

So that's what I've got so far. Next up will probably be Zelda 3: A Link to the Past. I'll be playing the Gameboy Advance version as that way I will have something to play on my lunch break at work.

The other games I'll plan to play are Twilight Princess for the Wii and Ocarina of Time for the Gamecube (the emulated disc that came with Wind Waker.) Definitely should be an interesting experience.

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