23 April 2010

Life as an Xbox Live Silver member exposed

You've heard of them.  You've seen them occasionally on Major Nelson's blog.  You've probably met several and didn't even know it.  I am, of course, talking about the quiet masses of Silver members on Xbox Live.  My confession today is: I'm one of them and my story is a cautionary tale for Microsoft, a stark warning for OnLive and a heads-up for Sony.  As for Nintendo...well, who cares really.
I have owned an Xbox Elite for over two years now and have enjoyed most of that ownership.  Initially, paid Gold membership was a foregone conclusion.  'Surely there must be lots to justify it' I thought and so I signed up right away and carried it for 24 months.  Within that time, I have spent more time waiting for *something* to happen.  Knowing a bit about technology, I understand that the 360 is a peer-to-peer device for most games (E.A. is the exception I think) so I assumed that Gold membership couldn't just be about multiplayer gaming.  After all, paying for an 'online gaming' service that basically connects the dots between players on the Internet is like hiring a skipper to tell you where to row your own boat rather than rowing you himself.  Essentially, the whole notion that Xbox Live multiplayer gaming requires financial 'support' is a bit of a joke.  Sure, there's infrastructure involved - but the 'meat and potatoes' part of online gaming is done by your console, not Microsoft servers (because they're aren't any).
It's particularly interesting that Sony and Microsoft have such different marketing methods which seem to be diametrically opposed to their actual service provision.  For instance, considering that the Playstation DOES use servers, it's a bit strange that it should remain free yet Microsoft would charge.   I am aware of Sony bringing in a 'Premium' service, but I would presume that by nature of that they will have to create the value-added content to drive subscriptions for it whereas Microsoft has taken a harder line by locking off online play altogether if you don't pony up.  The latter is the real problem and we have made it so.  Year after year, people continue to hand over their money for (I think) very little reason considering what you actually get as a Gold member.  Yes, you can play online.  Yes, you get access to certain demos before anyone else.  Yes, occasionally you get to sit in a gi-normous virtual studio and play a rather grinding version of '1 vs 100' whenever someone decides to run an actual 'season' which may or may not have an actual 'host' depending on whether the folks at the other end of the line give enough of a crap to show up for it. 
But so what?  Really.
I really do still like my Xbox but since cancelling my gold membership I'm starting to play it less and less.  A year ago, I talked one of my friends into getting a 360 so that we could play online together.  For a while, we did - but as we both have kids and wives who demand things like working appliances, Gold membership soon became one of those unnecessary expenses that had to go.  My friend is also a PC gamer and soon released that the lure of the 360 was far diminished considering that he could sit in front of his gaming rig and play online for free.  To date, I have no valid argument as to why that is flawed thinking.  At any rate, once my friend left Gold, I started to lose interest in online play.  Sure, I have lots of 'friends' but it all gets a bit tricky trying to meet up and find somewhere to play that isn't over-infested by whining, virginal 13-year-olds practicing their 'badness' on each other, shouting obscenities and 'tea-bagging' conquests and the like, all in a vain effort to deny their own existence as the scrawny little wretches that they are.  -Not my idea of a fun Saturday night in front of the tube.  Furthermore, games I really like to play online such as XBLA Billiards or some slightly older games I've bought don't have any players to speak of; leading me to believe that my demographic (25-40) either doesn't bother anymore because of the extra expense or is still obsessing over limited-cerebral titles like 'Modern Warfare' that I have no interest in playing anyway.
What I find ironic is how many Playstation players complain that there's not enough 'Warhawk' players: a game I'd really fancy if I ever scrounge up enough to buy a PS3.  I bet there's a lot of guys my age who play that, particularly those who are old and clever enough to know the history of Single-Trac and like their style of multiplayer gaming.  However, even on a FREE network it's hard enough finding players, so what hope can I really have on Xbox Live Gold?  Answer: None whatsover.
So here I sit with a console that I can't play online with and I yearn for one that I can yet I can't justify spending the money anymore.  I suppose you get to an age where budgets mean everything and you suddenly get really angry when you pay for something and get so little back for it.  Microsoft has been trumping up their 'Live' services for ages and at first, I believed them.  However, when you're paying for something, you expect results.  If there are no results, then anticipation turns to impatience, then frustration, then apathy and eventually terminating the subscription becomes a no-brainer because you just don't give a crap anymore.  That's the point I'm at and it's unlikely I'll ever subscribe again unless Microsoft can actually create a substantial reason that a) is not free elsewhere, b) is actually fun, c) isn't riddled with micro-transaction nonsense and most important d) delivers what was promised and exceeds expectations.  Microsoft is more than welcome to treat the world as its marketing labratory where it actually pushes the boundries to see how much money it can charge people for b.s. services before people start questioning it.  It's a bizarre approach - but they're welcome to it and the U.S. is a great place to start (and probably end) - but you can count this guinea pig out.  I've tried the kibble and it tastes like a horse's ass.
Lovingly Yours,
The Angry Rabbit.

07 April 2010

Studios taking the piss with Blu-Ray releases on older titles, jeopardizing the format

This wonderful article came up on Den of Geek today that highlights a very real problem with Studios and their attitude towards Blu-Ray.  


When the HD formats were announced, many accused the industry of trumping up a new format simply to cash in on existing stocks by re-releasing them in 'High Definition' (which some today still can't really see the difference)  Of course, many of us 'videophiles' jumped to HD's defense citing the enormous potential of the new format.  True to that citation, we have seen some astounding releases such as the absolutely gorgeous '2001: Space Odyssey', the wonderfully-restored 'Snow White' from Disney and the 1st-class treatment given to the director's cut of 'Dark City.'

Sadly, however, this is quickly showing to be a novelty in catalogue releases.  I personally have been 'had' on a few including 'The Crow', 'Blood Diamond' and most recently, the Blu-Ray début of the Lord of the Rings trilogy.  Having put some blind faith both in Peter Jackson and New Line cinema, I bought this off of Amazon blind without reading a review of the transfer.  After all, it was such a big release it could ONLY get the best, right?  Well, the very next day, I happened to catch a public showing of 'The Fellowship of the Ring' on BluRay in HMV and couldn't believe my eyes!  I called to one of the staff ('Dan' was his name, I believe) and asked 'Is that the BluRay version?' -to which he replied, 'Yeah, looks pretty amazing, doesn't it?'

After quietly flunking Dan on his video assessment skills, I pulled out my Blackberry and dialled in HiDefDigest.com (their review is linked here) only to see my fears justified.  The video transfer of my most beloved anticipation of the entire format release schedule was a dud!  For those of you who haven't seen it, the lack of detail and fuzziness in places is so awful that people would be justified in saying that BluRay is no better than DVD.  Knowing full well that this trilogy will have been ordered as 'The Choice Trilogy' for Home Cinema fans to show off their equipment, I pray that those who did know enough to keep this on the back shelf if they are still trying to convince that sceptical relative or spouse of their neighbour that BluRay is the 'bee's knees'.  On this occasion, they couldn't be further from the truth.

The real danger here is that people will be demo'ing the Lord of the Rings trilogy in a bid to see what BluRay can do and they will be harming confidence in the format by doing so.  Honestly speaking, I am that much of a video quality freak that I'll hold onto the trilogy if only for the slightly better results on 'The Two Towers' and 'The Return of the King', but it is a bitter-sweet at best; all in all, I feel ripped off.  Worse than that though, there are undoubtedly potential BluRay owners looking at this transfer and saying 'My DVD looks just as good' and writing off the format entirely.  

Even more distressing, this is not the first time as Den of Geek has kindly pointed out.  Studios are cranking out the catalogue titles as quick as they can press the discs.  From a greedy, profit-whoring monster point-of-view, I can see the point.  If you're only tossing an average of £3-£5 ($8 U.S.) for older films on DVD, studios are obviously wanting to recoup some lost profit by exploiting the new novelty.  However, Sony and the entire BD association should be sitting down together and drafting a 'code of conduct' or 'quality assurance policy' to prevent greedy studios from shovelling poorly-transferred films onto BluRay.  Studios who wish to release a catalogue title would then have to prove 'demonstrable effort' to the association; to show that care and quality was applied to a release's transfer, offering a marked improvement over previous transfers on both audio and video quality to a level worthy of the format.  This needs to be done sooner rather than later - and I hope Sony will take the lead with their own catalogue releases.

Despite what studios want to believe, people buy equipment (and formats) to enjoy the films that they love, and more often than not, the 'list of favourite films' is rooted firmly in the back-catalogue, not in recent releases.  If someone was to ask me - honestly - if having BluRay was worth the money, knowing that this person would pursue older titles, my answer would be 'not really, not yet...'  That sucks that I have to say that!  ...but it's true.  Studios are flat-out torpedoing BluRay by crapping on their back catalogues with mediocre transfers.  It worked with DVD because DVD was a novelty in being digital, small (compared to VHS) and offering relative access and extra content.  ...but none of these things are novelties any-more; DVD owns them and will keep them.  BluRay has only its visual and audio quality to ride on; ignore this too often and BluRay will lose consumer confidence altogether.

Next time I spend good money on a catalogue release, I'll be sure to wait for the review first.  Never again.
For those of you who haven't bought Lord of the Rings on BluRay yet - my advice would be to save your pennies and see if those fat asses in New Line Cinema can get their finger out and do something appropriate for the Extended Edition due out later this year/early 2011.

Lovingly Yours,
The Angry Rabbit.

01 April 2010

"Not a fan of driving games, I guess" said to me by my mate...

One of my local mates, James - recently bought a PS3 allowing me to get some hack-time on the most confused console ever made.  There are definitely some strengths to this 'fine' machine but I have a rather large beef list for Sony to take into account when designing their next console - but I digress.    At any rate, James is what you call a 'race monkey.'  He will forgive even the most humble of racing games if there's at least an ounce of gameplay in it.  I recently watched him play the new MX-ATV title on PS3 and thought it rather bland and simple, but he likes it and that's all that counts; it's his money after all.

After a rather long and boring dirt race in a buggy of some sort, he flipped to the 360 and powered up Forza 3.  I was half-watching him play as I was sorting the graphics drivers on his PC at the time, but payed attention enough to get a general sense of the game in action.  James swears by Forza 3 and I suppose you can't blame him.  He's a race fan and Forza 3 is regarded quite highly among 360 owners.  For me?  I think it's an overrated piece of shit.  The graphics lack refinement and the cars seem almost clinical in their movement.  Having driven for many years, there's a sense of sway to racing which Forza 3 just doesn't seem to grasp.  Sure, it may play by the numbers, but it looks cartoony and for me, it's rather boring.

Noticing that I was watching, James paused the race and offered me the controller.  'Want a shot?' -he asked.
I pursed my lips, 'Naw...carry on, mate.'
Looking almost insulted, James retorted,
'Not fan of driving games, I guess.  Are ya?'
-'Umm yeah - don't you remember who recommended Dirt 2 to you?'
'Oh yeah,' says James, 'I forgot about that...'

So am I a fan of driving games?  Ab-sol-f'in-lutely!
I like any driving game that feels like..ummm...driving.

Forza 3 sucks.
Let's see if GT5 can give fill the gap.

Lovingly Yours,

The Angry Rabbit.