Nintendo Fan Alliance - 50 Wii titles to look for in 2008

authorMike Suszek | June 8, 2008

Nintendo Fan Alliance recently posted their thoughts on 50 Wii games you should be looking for in ‘08. Though some titles are pure speculation and rumor (like Kid Icarus and Castlevania Wii), the list seems pretty complete, even with the comment section of the article spammed to the roof with flaming uncertainty.

Topping the list is Fatal Frame: Mask of the Lunar Eclipse, followed by Kid Icarus and The Conduit. Although questions arise at picking rumored games, the article does well to raise two questions: what games are you looking forward to this year, and what will be the best in ‘08 for the Wii?

As far as announced titles go, here is my top 10,for now:

1. The Conduit

2. Fatal Frame: Mask of the Lunar Eclipse

3. Alone in the Dark

4. Mario Super Sluggers

5. Deadly Creatures

6. Spore

7. Guitar Hero: World Tour

8. SimCity Creator

9. Wario Land Shake (hopefully this year, if not, Skate It)

10. Tales of Symphonia: Dawn of the New World

Enough for my love of lists! What are your thoughts?

Speculation: Castlevania Wii Announcement Soon?

authorMike Suszek | June 1, 2008

Finishing moving, unpacking, and cleaning usually results in some wind-down Metroid Prime action for me. Today resulted in reading the latest issue of Nintendo Power.

The July 2008 issue spills the beans on the recent title in the Castlevania series: Order of Ecclesia for the DS, a game hinted at by the previous issue. Something didn’t sit right while paging through the issue, however. There were too many squeaks in the pages, words that were taunting my mind with that “just you wait, we have something big we can’t tell you” feeling.

Starting with the Pulse section, devoted to letters from readers, I found two interesting tidbits. First came a reader named “Squi-G!!!” that picks his favorite games out of a hat, apparently. Talking about the idea of picking a personal Best Game Ever (BGE), Editor Chris Slate responds to the reader’s inquiry with “On this subject, keep an eye out for something really big next issue.”

“BJG93″ also wrote in asking about Nintendo’s devotion to the hardcore crowd and M-rated titles. Slate responded with “All I can say is… don’t miss next issue. And bring extra underwear.”

Aside from Slate’s need to pimp the oncoming issues of NP, something else is itchy here. Since the next issue is August 2008, the big post-E3 issue, we can assume some big Wii titles will be announced and detailed.

Other clues to lead us to rational speculation:

In the same issue, Koji “IGA” Igarashi guest writes about the Castlevania series thusfar. Reflecting on the PS2 versions, IGA mentioned that “while they feature some of the best work by [artist] Ayami Kojima and [composer] Michiru Yamane to date, the perfect 3-D Castlevania game is still ahead of us.” IGA brings up an interesting point: non of the next-gen home consoles have seen a Castlevania game. With the heart of the series being a 2-D platform/adventure, Konami has been focusing on the DS as Castlevania’s home for new games in vampire-slaying.

Seeing the massive success of slashing games on newer consoles like the Ninja Gaiden and Devil May Cry series (both bearing strong similarities to the imperfect 3-D iterations of Castlevania), one can imagine the direction IGA would like to go with the series.

Better yet, hear it from the man himself. IGN got a few words with Igarashi back in 2006, and squeezed this out of him:

“We still can’t think about anything other than this DS version because we are so busy, but of course we would like to think of something interesting and pleasant for Wii. I have some ideas for Castlevania for Wii.”

And since then, IGA has been thinking and brainstorming ways to bring the Wii an amazing, whipping-good time. Over a year and a half later, and he’s still thinking. MTV Multiplayer brought words from the series producer just this last month that he’s still… sorta unsure. At a recent Konami press event, Igarashi said, “In regards to using the Wiimote as a whip, I still think it’s going to get tiring after a while… But using the Wii, I have been thinking about different ways. I see it as a viable platform, the more and more I think about it.”

The more he thinks about it, over the years? Sounds kind of ridiculous for a visionary producer. To his credit, however, IGA loves to fine-tune his games, and any Wii game he will eventually make has to be better than good. It has to be “good + 1.”

Additionally, the new DS game’s detailing in this NP issue culminated in promising words. NP staffer Chris Hoffman explained that “regardless of the game’s extra trappings-and there are additional features we can’t yet discuss-at its heart lies a tried and true formula.” So many secrets!

If there’s one thing I miss in Nintendo’s systems, it’s connectivity. Knowing the DS and Wii can wirelessly connect, we can expect this to be a feature exploited in announcements at this year’s E3. Konami can really make it happen Metroid Prime/Metroid Fusion-style with new Castlevania titles on both the DS and Wii. All of it adding up to my speculation that the next big announcement gracing the ears of E3-goers and the pages of Nintendo Power will be an excellent, “perfect 3-D” Castlevania game for the Wii.

Of course, that’s in a perfect world. There are other possibilities for excellent M-rated games for the hardcore Wii gamers. Considering the same issue of Nintendo Power also talks about Mad World, it’s a safe bet that the big surprise for next issue isn’t that game. Also, this issue’s cover story was the new DS Castlevania title, so what are the chances that the next could be a Wii title in the series?

Enough banter; let’s speculate. What do YOU think the big announcements will be at E3? What could Nintendo Power staff be getting at? Are you sure it’s not butter? And if it is, how might butter make the Wii even better? Only time will tell…

$2 Million For Wii-hab?

The University of South Carolina recently received a $2 million grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, partly funding research on the rehabilitative effects of the Wii on stroke victims and their motor skills.

Debra Lieberman, director of the University of California Santa Barbara’s Health Games Research Center (you know, the UCSBHGRC?) said the researchers are “trying to find positive ways to use video games.”

The Wii-centric research will take a $200,000 chunk out of the grant money. The rest is devoted to other video game-centered research, including data gathering on players of an alternative reality game aimed at helping incoming college students fight the “freshman 15.” Hint: don’t drink beer.

Gaming masses have congregated online to loathe the research initiatives around the Wii, many of which are based entirely around the motion-sensing aspects of the console. We all win, however, when the rehabilitative properties of the leading home console spell good looks from the mainstream media.

Wish list: a hack n’ slash Doom-style Wii game that cures my arthritis.

In other news, typing “wii rehab” into google nets about 269,000 sites as of this writing.

If the Wii is a kid, the industry’s a sandbox

authorMike Suszek | May 27, 2008

Since the days of its inception, the Wii has often been misnomered as a “kiddie” system. The idea that the Wii would thrive as a playground for shovelware from money-hungry third party publishers became commonplace in the world of gaming. Gamers were ready to tag the labels on all of their favorite next-gen systems, with Nintendo continuing its reign of family-friendliness.

After much scrubbing, the labels can be removed.

The Entertainment Software Rating Board has worked to give out little letters that tell us who’s hands certain games belong in. Parents, when aware (or sane), can use these ratings as an indicator to tell what games their children can play.

To date, the ESRB has listed 425+ titles that appear on the Wii with ratings of E (Everyone) and E10+ (Everyone age 10 and older). Don’t snicker yet, well over 200 of these listed games are on Nintendo’s Virtual Console, many dating back to the NES.

These Virtual Console titles don’t count when considering the aspect of appearing on the Wii. The mislabel of the Wii as a “kiddie” system amongst others especially comes from the remote-waggling abilities of its motion-sensing features. Since Virtual Console games don’t utilize these features, not to mention they debuted on many previous systems, they don’t appear in this count. And since the data was pulled prior to the North American Wii Ware release, Wii Ware titles aren’t included, either.

Regardless, that leaves us with close to 180 Wii games that are rated E or E10+. Seems like a lot for a young system.

But it is more fun to divide games up by what systems they appear on. All of the titles obviously appear on the Wii, but do they do so exclusively?

So the Wii-exclusive titles and the multi-platform titles need to be divided up:

A total of 61.45% of these “everyone” titles for Wii are non-exclusives. At this point, expect a voice to cry out, “What about the DS? Everyone knows that these E-rated Wii shovelware non-exclusives are just Nintendo exclusives, like Mario and Sonic at the Olympic Games!” Fair enough.

Splitting up that 61.45%, we find that only 8.38% are Wii-DS exclusive titles. That means that 53.07% of kiddie Wii games are very multiplatform. In fact, one of the most common systems a Wii game would appear on is the PS2, in fact.

So one thing can be clear; kiddie-shovelware is a multi-platform thing. Companies (like THQ, for instance,) don’t just aim for the Wii to fish for a parent’s unknowing wallet. Publishers try to get more bang for their buck.

Think of the common marketing executives at big-name publishers that still refer to video games as “toys.” In using mediocre games to get money, a marketer will try to make the game appeal to a larger audience (E ratings,) and reach a larger community by spanning multiple platforms. This is assuming that all E-rated games are bad.

Based on our next set of data, that isn’t too far from the truth.

Quantity in games is never as important as quality, all gamers can agree to this. Examining the same data as before, the quality of these games can provide another angle to this issue.

Using GameRankings, a popular site that averages credible review scores in order to help gamers in their purchasing decisions, the average review scores for the E/E10+ rated Wii games helps determine the quality of the Wii titles in question.

What does this tell us? E-rated Wii titles tend to do better when they’re not alone (unless they’re made by Nintendo themselves, who is infamous for developing quality titles).

The worst of the bunch is precisely what would be expected: 3rd-party Wii exclusives. Though only a few percentage points behind the other catagories, games in this section are made by the companies that bring you Action Girlz Racing, Offroad Extreme, Hooked! Real Motion Fishing, and Monster Trux Arenas.

With roughly 3% between Wii exclusives and Non-exclusives, there isn’t much of a difference between the two in terms of quality on Nintendo’s platform. It is mostly a pile of stink. Nintendo proves in their own way that games for “everyone” can be good.

As seen in the data, certain companies are contributing to the exclusive stink. Conspiracy Entertainment are responsible for most of the Wii-exclusive shovelware, accounting for roughly 20% of the games with an average score of 30.92%. Destineer has 16% of the exclusives with an average score of 23.5%. Notably, no other company has put out more than 4 titles for the Wii exclusively. Big players like EA, Konami, Tecmo, and Capcom have put out 1-3 games each, and their average scores are well over 70%. Almost all of these “few gems” are retreads on older IPs as well.

In scouring the databases for game ratings and scores, not every game could have a score accompanying it. The reviewers can’t be blamed for not regarding Cocoto Kart Racer or My French Coach as games worth reviewing. In terms of the data gathered, they simply aren’t accounted for in the ratings spectrum. Interestingly, there were (as of this data being pulled,) four Wii-exclusive games and 11 non-exclusive games that didn’t have review scores.

And roughly all of them will appear in the $9.99 bin at Wal-Mart. Just keep walking, you can save some cash and get the Wii Zapper or some points for the Wii Shop to pick up a brand-new Wii Ware game.

This also begs the question, are kids not as picky about games nowadays? I rocked the Mega Man X games and F-Zero all the time on the Super NES. To be honest, I also spent plenty of time with Ren & Stimpy: Veediots and Hook, both being pretty unforgiving, relatively low-quality platformers. Do kids really like Wing Island?

Overall, the best way to take this data is lightly. If you’re reading this, you may not be into E-rated games regardless of what system they appear on. And if you’re a Wii gamer, know that you don’t have to. More developers are taking risks on the Wii with games like No More Heroes, but publishers need to follow suit. Kids can be risky too (I fell out of many a tree as a youngster, I was a risky one).

And if we want to follow the little kid in all of us, there are plenty of places to find the games that appease that.

Hot-lookin’ Wii games keep rolling in; now it’s Mad World!

authorMike Suszek | May 18, 2008

Everyone knows about The Conduit. It looks good in motion. It proves that 3rd-party developers can make something look spiffy, and play like a manly FPS, reminiscent of Doom.

We already know about some great games to look forward to, but as can be expected from the Wii, our vision doesn’t have to fall on the near future.

Mad World, a game currently in development by Platinum Games, is exclusive to the Wii in its comic-style glory. In a Sin City fashion, Mad World is primarily black and white, with bright red blood spurting everywhere in the gory attacks the player can execute. The spikes on the wall, chainsaws, and caution signs are your friend; as well as your enemy’s… enemy.

Platinum Games, though seemingly unknown, has roots in games like Viewtiful Joe, Resident Evil 4, Okami, and Devil May Cry. All of these games seem to point in the same direction as far as the expected gameplay for Mad World goes. And Mad World seems to point to awesome. It’s not hard to embrace cell-shaded games after the masterpiece that is No More Heroes.

As if there weren’t enough games to look forward to, Mad World had to come about and preemptively snatch another 50 bucks from me.

Check out the trailer below!


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