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Does anyone else's BB have a DS unit set up yet? I was at BB last night returning a controller and was wandering around the videogame area as I normally do when I saw an SP sitting at a Pause screen and thought I would see what game it was playing.
Much to my surprise, I realized it was actually a Nintendo DS with the Metroid Hunters Demo playing on it! I spent the next 10 minutes or so playing with it and I was impressed.
It took me a minute or two to realize that I had to use the touchscreen to turn Samus around, but once I got used to it, it worked surprisingly well. As you guys probably already know, the touchscreen shows your current position on the map and also lets you turn Samus, select weapons (there were 3 "buttons" on the demo, one was for regular blaster, the other for missles, the third wasn't used), and roll into the morph ball. You control forward, back, strafe left, and strafe right with the D-pad OR the X,Y,A,B buttons, making it usable for both righties and lefties. You fire with either shoulder button. The screen was bright and clear and the game itself looked pretty good. Seeing a true 3D game on a handheld was strange.
The unit didn't have a thumbstrap so I was using my actual thumb on the touchscreen which worked well but as IGN reported, the thumbstrap works much better than your actual fingers, and keeps the touchscreen from getting all smudged up.
Speaking of the touchscreen, it looks just as good as the main screen. There is a glossy coating on the screen that keeps it from getting scratched and also allows your finger (or stylus, or thumbstrap) to slide easily across the surface.
If course the DS was locked into a security arm type thing so I couldn't get a good judge on the weight but it "feels" pretty light. That being said, it also feels sturdy enough. I gave it a good squeeze with my hands and didn't feel the unit give at all. It looks like a solid piece of hardware.
It also looks damn cool. Of course I've seen tons of pictures of it but seeing it in person and actually using the touchscreen is a whole other experience. It's also smaller than I thought it was - a good thing.
I did notice when I quit the game that there was a multiplayer option at the main menu. Once you "clicked" on that, it asked if you wanted to start a game or join an existing game. I'm assuming that the demo will utilize the WiFi features and allow you to play against other DS'ers out there.
Anyway, sorry to ramble but getting some hands-on time with this unit is making me seriously consider a purchase. I have never owned a portable before, but this could be the unit that changes that.
Much to my surprise, I realized it was actually a Nintendo DS with the Metroid Hunters Demo playing on it! I spent the next 10 minutes or so playing with it and I was impressed.
It took me a minute or two to realize that I had to use the touchscreen to turn Samus around, but once I got used to it, it worked surprisingly well. As you guys probably already know, the touchscreen shows your current position on the map and also lets you turn Samus, select weapons (there were 3 "buttons" on the demo, one was for regular blaster, the other for missles, the third wasn't used), and roll into the morph ball. You control forward, back, strafe left, and strafe right with the D-pad OR the X,Y,A,B buttons, making it usable for both righties and lefties. You fire with either shoulder button. The screen was bright and clear and the game itself looked pretty good. Seeing a true 3D game on a handheld was strange.
The unit didn't have a thumbstrap so I was using my actual thumb on the touchscreen which worked well but as IGN reported, the thumbstrap works much better than your actual fingers, and keeps the touchscreen from getting all smudged up.
Speaking of the touchscreen, it looks just as good as the main screen. There is a glossy coating on the screen that keeps it from getting scratched and also allows your finger (or stylus, or thumbstrap) to slide easily across the surface.
If course the DS was locked into a security arm type thing so I couldn't get a good judge on the weight but it "feels" pretty light. That being said, it also feels sturdy enough. I gave it a good squeeze with my hands and didn't feel the unit give at all. It looks like a solid piece of hardware.
It also looks damn cool. Of course I've seen tons of pictures of it but seeing it in person and actually using the touchscreen is a whole other experience. It's also smaller than I thought it was - a good thing.
I did notice when I quit the game that there was a multiplayer option at the main menu. Once you "clicked" on that, it asked if you wanted to start a game or join an existing game. I'm assuming that the demo will utilize the WiFi features and allow you to play against other DS'ers out there.
Anyway, sorry to ramble but getting some hands-on time with this unit is making me seriously consider a purchase. I have never owned a portable before, but this could be the unit that changes that.