VideoGame John

Is the Future of Gaming Mobile Devices?

Mobile Gaming has come a long way since the Nintendo released the Gameboy in 1989. Simple but fun monochrome games and even early attempts at multiplayer modes provided many with their first taste of mobile gaming.
Of course the Gameboy couldn’t provide as an immersive experience as home gaming on a TV screen or PC monitor so mobile games were used to provide a brief distraction or quick blast whilst on the move, and this has remained mainly true until recent times.
The last generation of handheld devices made great strides forward with the Sony PSP and Nintendo DS providing a gaming experience akin to their home console cousins but only now are mobile games starting to challenge as the primary gaming device of choice.

The Evolution of Mobile Games

Driving the evolution are the latest range of mobile phones and tablet devices. These devices have become an everyday part of our lives and as they have become more powerful the games that they can pay have developed from Snake to full blown 3D action games.
Originally driven by cheap casual games that are easily accessible through integrated on-line market places, mobile gaming has become big business, allowing bedroom developers to rub shoulders with the traditional big players in games development. No longer is there a need to go to a physical store, with digital downloads providing content, mobile gaming has been a key factor in the shift away from buying games on the high street. Compare Modern Combat 3 on the iPad to Battlefield on the Xbox360 the similarities are greater then the differences.

No longer are dedicated gaming devices required to play high quality games, with powerful processors and high resolution screens, mobile devices have become powerful gaming devices in their own right, forget HD TV’s the highest resolution screen that most gamers will be able to play games on will be the Retina display on the new iPad.
With touchscreen devices the way that we interact with games is changing, most phones don’t have physical controls, so games designers are creating touch screen interfaces which introduces a whole new level of direct interaction with games, you can directly control in game action by touching an object, and this has really helped develop a whole market for direct interaction games. Look at the success of Angry Birds, the ability to directly touch and drag an on-screen rope gave the game an extra level of accessibility and took it the mobile world by storm.

Mobile Gaming Challenges

Traditional arcade style games can struggle to work properly on touch screen devices, these style of games work best with physical tactile controllers, e.g. a Joypad, and the developers of some mobile games have tried to compensate for a

The Evolution of Mobile Gaming Phones

lack of physical buttons with virtual on-screen controls with mixed success, it’s fair to say that virtual joypads work better on larger screen mobile devices then cramped small screen mobiles, but all to frequently buttons are missed in the heat of action. Developers have tried several ways to provide physical controls on mobile devices, in 2003 Nokia released the Ngage phone which featured a D-pad and raised numbers which acted as buttons, a strange design and limited catalogue of games resulted in only limited commercial success and last year Sony Released the Experia Play with an Integrated PlayStation style controller to make the handset appeal to gamers. It’s also possible to connect an Xbox 360 controller to Android devices, these are all workable solutions but to be playable across all devices games need to take advantage of the devices strong point and have a touch interface.

PC quality Gaming on Mobile Phones?

There is no doubt that the gap between Mobile and PC gaming is decreasing but what about if you want that proper full on PC gaming Experience? Thanks to the OnLive games streaming service this is also possible on your Mobile Device. OnLive provides cross platform access to AAA PC titles, and this now includes mobile access through Android clients, with an iOS client becoming available at some point in the future. As long as you have a 3Mb internet connection an incredible library of high quality PC gaming is available to you. The service is still young and there are 1 or 2 big titles missing but as OnLive matures the experience and catalogue will continue to improve, PC Gaming can now follow you around, and because it’s a streaming service there isn’t any need for disks or large installs.

Console gaming will always have a place in the home, but as Mobile gaming continues to improve the boundaries between Mobile and large screen gaming will continue to become blurred. The fact that this quality of games are now available on a device that you always have with you is reducing the requirement for turning on your games console.

Appealing to all demographics, mobile games are becoming the staple for gaming, whilst console gaming is slowly becoming the exception.

About the Author

This has been a blog post by John Lane, John has been playing and enjoying video games since 1982. To read all his Blog Posts Click Here.

You can follow John on Twitter at @videogamejohn

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GPS Gaming with Geocaching

With the evolution of smartphones to include GPS and always on data, a new way of location based gaming is now possible, and whilst GPS gaming has taken longer to take off then many expected, high quality examples of the genre are starting to appear. Whether avoiding virtual zombies in you real world or having to visit specific locations near you, smartphones which have access to your location, and connected Apps are turning gaming from a virtual experience into an actual experience, and a great example of GPS gaming is Geocaching.
Geocaching predates smartphones buts lends itself perfectly to mobile devices, traditionally played with maps, print outs and old school GPS receivers the goal of Geocaching is to find hidden boxes known as caches from only supplied GPS coordinates and the occasional clue.

Geocaching can be a great social experience

Caches are all hidden by other players and their location shared through a free membership website, for a long time the requirement of dedicated GPS hardware limited access to the game to keen enthusiasts but with the release of smartphone Apps it’s become more accessible to all.
Logging into the Geocaching App you can instantly see all the caches that have been hidden near you, see a map with directions from your current location to a cache, you can also see the logs of those that have found the cache before you.

When you arrive at the correct coordinates there is still the difficult job of finding the cache, Geocachers are great at hiding caches and the added presence of non-players (known as Muggles) adds difficulty. There is great pride within the Geocaching community of keeping caches secret from non-players making caches in very public places harder to retrieve. When you have found a cache the Geocaching App allows you to upload your find details to the Geocaching website, leave a comment and post a picture before you replace the cache exactly where you found it for the next player to find.

Geocaching on the iPhone

Geocaching is great fun, can be a solo or team activity, is good exercise, helps you explore new locations, and uses your Smartphone perfectly, it’s a connected approach to a popular game and hobby.

To start Geocaching you will need to sign up for a free account at Geocaching.com and then download an appropriate App for your Smartphone, on iOS and Android you can’t go wrong with the official Geocaching Apps that are on sale in the App stores, although there are free unofficial Geocaching apps also available for you to get started, for example Geobeagle is a great free app available in the Google Play store.

About the Author

This has been a blog post by John Lane, John has been playing and enjoying video games since 1982. To read all his Blog Posts Click Here.

You can follow John on Twitter at @videogamejohn

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WWE Wrestlefest on the iPhone – A Legacy enhanced or ruined?

For fans of Video Games there have been precious few Wrestling games which have proven to be continuously fun and exciting to play, this is especially true of video games representing the wacky world of WWE. One exception is the extremely popular Wrestlefest coinop arcade game released by in the early 90′s, which used large, colourful and exaggerated spectacular graphics long with simple but tight controls to recreate engrossing in ring action.

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The Original Wrestlefest

 

Wrestlefest is considered a classic by it’s fans and there have been many calls for a modern remake of the game, and now thanks to THQ, Wrestlefest has been remade for iOS devices, but does it live up to the memory of the original game?

The first thing that fans of the original game will notice is that the graphical style of the game has been changed, gone are the large blocky colourful characters of the original and in their place are smaller more streamline images which bear a resemblance to the cell shaded graphics that were popular in the previous generation of console games. For me an element of the atmosphere of the game has been lost with the switch of graphical style, gone are the larger then life superstars replaced with smaller less detailed figures typical of those found in 16 bit games.

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The New Wrestlefest

 

Whilst the control system has remained unchanged, the arcade original benefited significantly from having physical controls, whereas the iOS version relies on a virtual joystick and buttons, this significantly makes the game harder to play especially when the action gets frantic on screen, this is a common problem on iOS games where a touch enhanced control system hasn’t been implemented .
The original arcade game had 2 game modes Royal Rumble and Saturday Night Main Event Tournament, the new iOS version of the games supplements these modes with 1vs1 Exhibition, Road to Wrestlemania, TagTeam and Gauntlet Match modes, extra gameplay modes are always welcome although in reality they add little variety to the game, the multiplayer mode uses Apples Game Centre to find you opponents over the Internet and this is a big selling point for the game, unfortunately in the days after its launch the multiplayer mode has been crippled by massive lag, although this should improve in the future.

The Original Roster

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The New Roster

The original Wrestlefest roster was very impressive, featuring the top superstars of the time, in comparison the new game has a mix of current stars and legends although there are a number of big names missing the result is that the game feels like its missing star power, and this is magnified by a number of characters being locked until you make an in game purchase.

Ultimately given the popularity of the original game Wrestlefest is a massive disappointment and this certainly isn’t the game that fans were expecting. However Wrestlefest isn’t a terrible game and if you aren’t aware of the original game then you may enjoy it, but it is far from a great game.
There is always the danger that with older games that were popular in our youth rose tinted glasses take hold and we remember the game as being better then it is, but Wrestlefest remains popular to this day in the world of emulation, and if you have the know how this remains the best way to play Wrestlefest.

Other comments about Wrestlefest from around the TwitterSphere:

By @JakeCian on Twitter: The #WWE game #wrestlefest available on App Store for iPhone RT @WWEgames it’s a really fantastic game!!! Great work!!!

By @_KaJe on Twitter: Thanks for the #Wrestlefest re-release, but I’ll stick with the original. #bejealous http://t.co/RU12lZJk

By @blackberry_MUFC on Twitter: just downloaded wwe wrestlefest ! Pure retro wwe gaming at its best . #memoriesofthearcade

By @INICKCULLMBRAND on Twitter: Glad there is a lite version of @wwegames wrestlefest get a test drive before we buy :)

By @_FuZ__: on Twitter: I agree with you on wrestlefest, just downloaded the lite version, just another bad remake :-(

About the Author

This has been a blog post by John Lane, John has been playing and enjoying video games since 1982. To read all his Blog Posts Click Here.

You can follow John on Twitter at @videogamejohn

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