9th May 2006, 7:00 PM
http://www.break.com/movies/miketysonpunchout.html
Selective memory indeed. Try shooting an egg without using a C button. Yes it did use the c buttons for a camera, but it also used it for other purposes.
I will freely state that I prefer using a stick for things like movement. It is unfortunate that a lot of the time, that just dont' make for a good solution. I've tried to make it work, but it didn't. It is very awkward. All we're asking for is two buttons really. Why defend something like this? I will use the stick for a game like Perfect Dark, sure, because I would prefer a stick for movement in a game like that. But if I'm playing Banjo Kazooie, I want to be able to hit buttons normally. I need QUICK access to buttons and I don't want to be tripping over a control stick like I did in OOT for Gamecube. The game worked well "enough", but like ABF I basically just used the buttons and only stuck unimportant items on the C stick. Further, I just have to say that playing the Ocarina was a tad on the awkward side with the stick. Too easy to press the wrong direction.
Selective memory indeed. Try shooting an egg without using a C button. Yes it did use the c buttons for a camera, but it also used it for other purposes.
I will freely state that I prefer using a stick for things like movement. It is unfortunate that a lot of the time, that just dont' make for a good solution. I've tried to make it work, but it didn't. It is very awkward. All we're asking for is two buttons really. Why defend something like this? I will use the stick for a game like Perfect Dark, sure, because I would prefer a stick for movement in a game like that. But if I'm playing Banjo Kazooie, I want to be able to hit buttons normally. I need QUICK access to buttons and I don't want to be tripping over a control stick like I did in OOT for Gamecube. The game worked well "enough", but like ABF I basically just used the buttons and only stuck unimportant items on the C stick. Further, I just have to say that playing the Ocarina was a tad on the awkward side with the stick. Too easy to press the wrong direction.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)