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NCAA Football 09 Looking Good

July 8th 2008 11:09
Ah, the joys of this new generation of gaming consoles. I remember the days when a guy had to wait for a Pizza Hut promotion or subscribe to a pricey gaming magazine to get his hands on some upcoming game demos. Then, if that didn’t work you had to wait for your rich buddy to buy a game, then go over to his house, throw a few please and thank you’s his mom’s way till she asks you to stay for dinner, then politely excuse yourself from the table to figure out whether Mortal Kombat 13 is really as cool as it looks on TV.

Nowadays, with the Information Age in full swing, all you have to do is pick up your controller. Xbox Live and the Playstation Network have enabled us to preview thousands of titles right from our couches. NCAA Football 09 is one of the newest demos on PSN, and it’s definitely worth a look-see. Sure, you might be skeptical. Last years demo, with no announcers, weird camera angles and horrible frame-rate kept me from buying the game. But this years effort is much smoother, sleeker, and packed with as many features as EA could cram into a gig and a half.


The Play Now option puts you in control of Ohio State or LSU as they battle it out at the Shoe in Columbus. The graphics as the game opens are much improved from last year. The shadowing is much more realistic and even the crowd passes as convincing. Lee Corso and Kirk Herbstreit talk about key players as they have in previous installments, but the demo doesn’t show the players on the field. This is hopefully just a symptom of it being a demo, and not something that carries over into the actual game.


The players then line up for the kick off, which is said to be one of the many instances that the game will allow players to insert their own music. The demo doesn’t allow it, but that’s to be expected. It does give a glimpse of improved animation though. In the past, the kick off teams were stiff as statues until the kicker approached the ball. Now the players move freely, stretching, jumping up and down, just as they would in real life.

Once the ball is kicked, the returner fields it and as you advance him up the field you’ll notice a more human flow to the jukes and spins as he tries to avoid defenders. There’s no noticeable change to controller layout. I didn’t play last years title as I said, but the controls here were nearly identical to last year’s Madden. Throw an interception or go for a game winning kick and you’ll notice a change though. When you throw a pick, your QB’s composure will drop, causing a slight drop in attributes and the inability to check your pre-play play art. All is not lost however. Immediately after the interception, you’re taken to a screen where you’re asked to pick which play the defense ran. Choose correctly, and you get a portion of the composure back. If you’re wrong, you lose more. On game winning field goals, the kick meter ices over and accuracy is hard to come by. There’s also a rather distracting thumping sound meant to simulate the nervous kicker’s heart.

If you get bored with the Tigers and the Buckeyes, you can try out the Mascot Game feature, which is making it’s debut on the new consoles this year. You can choose between Florida’s Gator or the Texas Longhorn, but it doesn’t really matter because all mascot teams have maximum attributes. The major draw of this feature is the almost comical athleticism of these players. Go for a juke and the ball carrier will do a mid-air cartwheel to avoid the defender. The only real flaw of this mode in the demo is when the Gator QB lines up under center. A graphics glitch makes the centers tail go right through the middle of him. Maybe the actual game won’t have this, but even if it does, it doesn’t take anything away from the fun of being able to plow through defenders with superhero-like power, all the while dressed in a ridiculous alligator suit.

This is definitely one of the better sports demos available and a must-have for any football loving gamer. So save your money and stop taking advantage of your rich friends. You don’t even have to put on a pair of pants. Just download and enjoy.
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Anyone getting bored with their Playstation 3’s plethora of capabilities yet? Not to worry. Sony CEO Howard Stringer came to the rescue today with the announcement of an on-demand video service similar to the current Playstation Store. And the best part, it’s slated for release in summer 2008, which if I’m not mistaken, is like, now. But if it’s anything like the Playstation Home, (which I doubt) who knows when it will be released.

According to Arstechnica.com, no other video titles besides the movies and television Sony currently produces has been announced, but the selection should be plentiful. Great. The thing already is so convenient that you don’t even have to go leave the couch to turn it on or even to buy some games, and now it’ll have a whole library of movies just an X button away. No plans for an integrated soda fountain or popcorn machine have yet been announced, but I say why not? And throw in a blood sugar monitor while you’re at it so we can watch our slow descent into diabetes in crystal clear high definition.

But seriously, being the movie freak I am, I’m really looking forward to this. It only makes sense that they would make an on-demand movie service, and although unlikely, I wouldn’t be surprised to see them create a music store as well. It would be harder to compete in that market with iTunes and Amazon pretty well cornering it, but it wouldn’t take much to develop if they’re already providing video.

I’m not surprised that Sony has been able to do so much with the console. It really is one of the best gadgets I’ve ever purchased and one can only imagine what they might do next, with either the PS3, or, even further ahead, the next-gen Sony console. Any thoughts? I’m interested to know. Drop me a comment or an email.

On another PS3 related note, I found this cool OS X Leopard theme for the XMB today on deviantART and thought I would share it with my fellow Mac/PS3 fans out there. Check it out.

Also, props to Orblites Jon and Charles for deeming me worthy of this cool domain. I hope to do them proud.
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Back in 1989, Jack Nicholson sported a purple fedora and a load of lipstick and slapsticked his way to the bank as everyone’s favorite killer clown, the Joker, in Tim Burton’s Batman. Nearly two decades later Hollywood decided to give the Clown Prince of Crime another shot, this time with Heath Ledger behind the face paint in Christopher Nolan’s followup to Batman Begins, The Dark Knight. I loved the first Batman movie mostly because of Nicholson, and his portrayal has already gone down in movie history. It was perhaps my favorite Nicholson performance prior to The Departed. (Although the Shining is close.) But in a time where movie villains have become more sly, greedy slime balls than sick, darkly demented killers, the Joker needs to make a comeback.

For those of you who haven’t seen the trailer to this film, check it out. Ledgers voice is somewhere between Richard Dawson and Charles Manson and the splotchy face paint and grungy hair are ideal for the new incarnation as opposed to the sleek and pristine mask and slick gangster do that had Nicholson looking more a pimp than a murderer. In the trailer when Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) asks if they found any identification on the Joker a policeman responds “Nothing in his pockets but knives and lint.” The perfect teaser to prepare us for this new breed of bad guy. I’m going to say right now that Ledger's Joker could do for villains what Robert Downey Jr.’s Iron Man did for heroes.

When Ledger’s death was first announced, buzz for this film went through the roof and, while not at all doubting his ability as an actor, I feared that reviews of the film and his performance would lose much of their objectivity due to the tragedy. Now, after seeing several trailers and reading Peter Travers’ review, I know that this performance would have been hyped just as much if not for the added drama. Ledger’s Joker will be this years big character, mixing the debauched brilliance of Daniel Plainview with the demented callousness of Anton Chigurh. He was robbed of an Oscar for Brokeback Mountain and the Academy would do well to pay him back in spades with the first posthumous Oscar in more than 30 years.

I know I’m speaking boldly for someone who has yet to see the film, but I’m a movie geek just as much as I am a tech geek if not more so, and there’s nothing I love more than a great villain. I don’t think great villainy will stop here for this new Bat franchise either. I may be getting light-years ahead of myself, but I’m going to go out on a limb and say that Aaron Eckhart could knock the role of Two-Face out of the park. I’m not a big sequel guy, but as long as Christopher Nolan is directing and Christian Bale is dawning the cape, I think this could be the superhero genre’s Lord of the Rings trilogy.

On a more tech related note, I saw the new Guitar Hero for the DS advertised on TV the other day. I feel bad passing judgement on it without picking up the stylus, but does anyone else find the mere idea of this incredibly ridiculous? Let me know
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