Yeah I saw your post above mine. I simply am bumping the topic with the "latest" whether its rumor/fake/real. Are you Mega Fenix? lol
I'm his fart.
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Posted by Raiden on 23 March 2016 - 05:12 PM
Yeah I saw your post above mine. I simply am bumping the topic with the "latest" whether its rumor/fake/real. Are you Mega Fenix? lol
I'm his fart.
Posted by Raiden on 20 March 2016 - 11:36 PM
It's BS. Analog sticks are part of the mold and do not move. Look close. The pic is a cropped picture of the Unreal Engine 4 demo. Cropped instead of making it fit the screen so that's another red flag. Never do patents look like the final product even the Wii U gamepad one was not the final product. The patent also has handles.The patent is not showing the controller anyway but the free form display concept so another flag. What we have here is a 3d printed model with a cropped image PS or pasted on it or both but either way everything on this screams a fake.
Posted by Raiden on 02 February 2016 - 11:19 PM
Posted by Raiden on 29 January 2016 - 10:27 AM
As a person who still plays games from Saturn,PS1,N64 days. Eh I am fine with it' It's a 10 year old game in HD and all one should expect. Most PS2 games look worse in HD so whatever. Game is good anyway and point still gets across in story so it still serves it's purpose.
Posted by Raiden on 23 January 2016 - 08:48 PM
Posted by Raiden on 18 January 2016 - 11:39 AM
Posted by Raiden on 16 January 2016 - 01:10 AM
http://nintendoevery...wo-decades-ago/
Patents sometimes come and go. That’s exactly what happened with an idea Nintendo reserved over two decades ago, which is rather reminiscent of Super Mario Maker.
In 1994, Nintendo registered a U.S. patent for a “Video game/videographics program editing apparatus with program halt and data transfer features”. This would let users pause the gameplay and edit parts through a streamlined UI. Players would not need any knowledge of programming – just like Super Mario Maker.
In the patent description, there are various tidbits about the standalone hardware’s potential functions. These include changing the amount of items and behavior of enemies, rearranging level designs, resuming gameplay after editing, and saving the revised game. One portion of the patent mentions exchanging user-generated content via a telephone line as well. If given the right tools, players could even come up with their own gaming experience with the hardware.
It’s definitely an interesting concept, but one that never made it to market. You can see the original patent in full here.
Posted by Raiden on 10 December 2015 - 02:55 PM
Posted by Raiden on 10 December 2015 - 01:23 PM
http://www.freepaten...15/0355768.html
A BUNCH of info in the link
Smartphone then? I don't like it. Gaming needs physical feedback buttons.
Reminds me of the fan mock ups for the "Revolution" controller in 2005.
Posted by Raiden on 07 December 2015 - 04:22 PM
Posted by Raiden on 07 December 2015 - 03:10 PM
In this topic you don't spam. No gifs nothing off topic. Say something nice about a member you like or dislike but be nice.
Hank Hill has many PSN trophies, That takes dedication. Can't fault that.
Posted by Raiden on 06 December 2015 - 12:00 AM
Question is, dd it win DESPITE of no voice chat or BECAUSE of no voice chat?
Because.