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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by fujishig
(Post 10482406)
As far as scanning real world items... I'm not sure any of the launch games has that capability. Kinectimals has stuff you can scan in the game, but those are tags that you scan in, not the objects themselves...
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Ugh... my wife and daughter caught the commercial for the dance game and Xplay's review of some sports game... now they want this.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Well, my wife officially loves ours, so I guess it was worth it for me. I haven't had a chance to do more than play around with it for a few minutes, but so far it seems like a decent enough piece of hardware without any software that really speaks to my gaming preferences.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by maingon
(Post 10482569)
Well, I gave in and bought one. I shouldnt of but did. I didnt buy any games with it but I really want Your Shape Fitness the demo was pretty cool and could be a good workout.
Will likely get Kinectanimals for my 6 year old son and Dance Central for both of them. Appears nothing for me yet. :( |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
^^ Same here. I'll probably pick up the sports game too. That said, this thing is destined to be collecting dust like the elliptical we had to have two years ago.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
So here's a minor nitpick spinning off from the annoyance that the dashboard was redesigned for Kinect, but Kinect can't interact with it and instead there's a Kinect Hub.
Why does the Kinect Hub not have access to my Game Library? Granted 99.99% of everything I can find there (XBLA, XBLIG, disc games) are not Kinect-enabled. But do you know what is? The Joy Ride demo I downloaded. My mom came up to spend time with my daughter on her birthday last night and I was showing her some of the stuff and I just wanted to fire up that demo since I was too lazy to get up and put an actual Kinect disc in. Couldn't do it. I would have had to get up and get a controller just to launch a non-disc Kinect game. Lame. I envision a future when there are XBLA games that use Kinect and I hope this is something they correct. |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Can more than 1 person interact with the kitties in Kinectimals at the same time or do they have to take turns? If I get this, I envision many fights over the furballs between my daughters.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
I picked up Kinect over lunch. I rationalized it as a Xmas present for the kids and my wife was intrigued by EA Sports Active 2... but let's face it, I'll be playing any sports games that are worthwhile and maybe that Dance game too. :)
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Being that I feel my wii was mostly a waste of money until I started streaming Netlfix, I will not be wasting money on the Move or Kinect. :cool:
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by djones6746
(Post 10483358)
Being that I feel my wii was mostly a waste of money until I started streaming Netlfix, I will not be wasting money on the Move or Kinect. :cool:
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by Gooter
(Post 10483036)
Can more than 1 person interact with the kitties in Kinectimals at the same time or do they have to take turns? If I get this, I envision many fights over the furballs between my daughters.
Whereas other Kinect games nail the multiplayer component, kinectimals really purports to a single player experience. This means for those watching, it can be a little tiresome,especially if you're itching to have a go yourself. There should have been some sort of two player mode at least which would have greatly improved the shared experience. |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
There are plenty of achievements for doing 2-4 player stuff, but those must just be the challenges/mini-games. We haven't broached those yet.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Anyone tried Your Shape: Fitness Evolved? Kind of curious if thats actually a decent workout. EA Active 2 sounds promising but $100 on top of the $150 Kinect is a bit crazy.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Is anyone using Kinect with a tight living space? I'm not sure I can accommodate the recommended 8 feet of space.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by NiCK Crush
(Post 10483535)
Is anyone using Kinect with a tight living space? I'm not sure I can accommodate the recommended 8 feet of space.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by wlj
(Post 10483684)
After spending a few days with it, you definitely need to have alot of space. 8 feet away seems to be the sweet spot. I don't have alot of width available so my wife and i are on top of each other doing 2 player.
Isn't that how things are supposed to work? :eyebrow: :hump: |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by wlj
(Post 10483684)
After spending a few days with it, you definitely need to have alot of space. 8 feet away seems to be the sweet spot. If I go up much more than that it tells me to back up. If you want to play with 2 players you have to have 8 ft or more. You also need some extra width to accomodate 2 players, unless you want to slap each other in the face all the time.
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by RichC2
(Post 10483523)
Anyone tried Your Shape: Fitness Evolved? Kind of curious if thats actually a decent workout. EA Active 2 sounds promising but $100 on top of the $150 Kinect is a bit crazy.
Finally got to try the full game, since I had only played the demo. It is a good workout. Very accurate too. You cant cheat in the game. So you will get a pretty good workout. Especially if you have a couple dumbells |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by Vryce
(Post 10483695)
Isn't that how things are supposed to work? :eyebrow: :hump:
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Here's a pretty neat story: http://www.gamingnexus.com/FullNews/...Item20369.aspx
There’s almost nothing I’ve seen before I picked up Kinect that really interested me. Many of the games looked OK, and the ones I played with before the launch didn’t really make me want to jump out and buy the thing. But, seeing as we’re a website that reviews games, I didn’t want to saddle Chuck with all the Kinect games to review. So, I sauntered off to my local Target store along with my son and picked up a unit . Getting it home, I went through the setup and as with anything new or unique, my son gets pretty inquisitive. Even though it looked like a simple black bar, he was all over the way it moved and tracked the user. He was excited about trying Kinect Adventures as the box looked like it had some fun and interesting games on it. Now, let me say a few years ago, my son was diagnosed with Autism. Thankfully, he’s pretty high functional so we’ve been fortunate in that he’s very responsive to my wife and I. When you’re a parent of a special needs child though, you really pay special attention to any small signs of progress. For me, it’s hard to not be amazed at some of the things he’s learned given the hand he’s dealt with. So, when my son really wanted to try out Kinect, I was more than happy to oblige. He’s taken up to watching me play a lot of video games and tries to play some himself. Controllers for the PlayStation 3, Wii, and Xbox 360 do frustrate him and he has a lot of trouble controlling the characters on the screen using the peripherals, but he’s always willing to try and keep on practicing in getting better. As he tells me sometimes, “I want to play with you, Daddy.” so he’s pretty persistent in trying to get proficient with them. What proceeded to happen was pretty amazing to me. Firing up Kinect Adventures, we tried out Rally Ball as our first game to play together. He jumped around and flailed his arms and legs in trying to punch the balls back to the blocks. It was pretty cool to see but the thing that really threw me for a loop was when the game ended. The game made my son the primary controller and seeing as I didn’t explain anything to him on how it works, I was ready to tell him to step out so I can go in and navigate through the menus. But, I decided to see if he could follow my directions and interact with the menus. I said hold out your hand and place it on the button. Without any hesitation, he put his hand up and moved it over the button on the screen and held it there until the circle animation finished, indicating the button has been pressed. After that initial coaching, he proceeded to move around in the menus without much vocal cues from me. I just stood there and was flabbergasted by what I just saw. Microsoft’s design team did such a good job at creating a user interface with Kinect that my son was able to go through each menu to initiate the next round in Rally Ball. It’s intuitive enough that I spent barely any time teaching my four year old special needs son how to go about the menu system. Throughout my hour session with my son by my side, I was constantly impressed by how easy he could figure out each game and play them without getting fed up. He knew how to flap, glide, and move around in Space Pop just by me saying, “Flap your arms to fly.” once. A few moves around the living room let him figure out that the Avatar in the game mimicked his movements as well in moving in and out. With 20,000 Leaks, he had no trouble figuring out that you place your hand or foot over the leaks to close them. It was quite an exhilarating feeling to see him play all these little mini-games on his own with very minor coaching from me. For the first time, I was able to play something with my son and not spend any time with him being frustrated on not being to do anything or have a character get stuck on the screen. He had fun with all the games and actually did well with them. The joy in his eyes as he was able to complete the tasks and move around in the menus is something I’ll never forget. Kinect isn’t targeted to me, but it’s brought my son into the gaming fold with its intuitive controls and simple games in Kinect Adventures. Even though I haven’t found a launch game that I’m interested in spending a lot of time with alone, I know that I’m able to spend some great time playing along side my son and see him thoroughly enjoying his time on a console.While he still struggles in communicating, I know there’s one thing he can do without having to deal with any of the frustrations Autism has brought upon in his life. And for me, that’s worth much more than the $150 I spent in picking up the peripheral. |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
^^WOW, that's awesome!
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
I heard it dosen't pick up black people very well..
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
"Kinect : The ideal video game peripheral for high-functioning light-skinned autistic kids."
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Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Kinect isn’t targeted to me, but it’s brought my son into the gaming fold with its intuitive controls and simple games in Kinect Adventures. Even though I haven’t found a launch game that I’m interested in spending a lot of time with alone, I know that I’m able to spend some great time playing along side my son and see him thoroughly enjoying his time on a console. While he still struggles in communicating, I know there’s one thing he can do without having to deal with any of the frustrations Autism has brought upon in his life. And for me, that’s worth much more than the $150 I spent in picking up the peripheral. |
Re: Kinect: Are you buying one?
Originally Posted by Decker
(Post 10483880)
"Kinect : The ideal video game peripheral for high-functioning light-skinned autistic kids."
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