Graphics are good, gameplay is great, sound (other than repetetive music) is very good, and there is a lot of depth to the career mode. I am a huge sports nut and buy mostly only sports games and am quite pleased to add this one to my collection. I'm not a big tennis fan, but, I've always enjoyed tennis games. I own Top Spin 4 and must say that it is great. I have to pull out some Sony Kevin Bulter, "Here in the future we have things called buttons and they are important to play games with." So in order for Topspin to be kinect compatible, it would pretty much have to be a hit the ball and not much else game. The Kinect has limited if any real games for it, it has to have games made for it, because it's so simple to use. There are real games that use the move, Such as Heavy Rain, RUSE, Tiger Woods Golf, Killzone 3, ect. To me it's something for casual gamers, who need this simple,them to play games. I got rid of the Kinect due to the fact perfect lighting is needed, it would either work decent or mess up right in the middle of a game. It would make it no different than Kinect sports table tennis 2.0. If it did support Kinect it would be because the gameplay is extremely weak and you'd lack the control needed to make this game challenging and interesting. That's one of the biggest reason I'm getting this,it doesn't support the Kinect. Why must people complain about no Kinect support? Grand Slam Tennis uses Motion Plus for a much more accurate game (once you get used to the calibration) where you can control both your shots and movement. Maybe Move will fare better but I doubt should try some of the other tennis games on the Wii other than just Wii Sports. Sadly they couldn't, so it seems they dropped the Kinect support, which is a shame as Topspin 4 sounds like a good game but I've no desire to play another tennis game with button presses. If Microsoft would quit with the controllerless standpoint then such things should be easy to improve on, if it could have tracked reference points on a plastic racqet then forehand, backhand or twists of the wrist should be easy to track. In the preview it was said that Kinect couldn't track wrist movements, which left it with a Wii Sports style waggle. You would think that tennis would be a sport in which Kinect would excell (although diving for a shot could be dangerous) but it seems like developers are having as much trouble implementing it as they did with the Wii in its early days.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |