CRTGAMER wrote:Is this the PS2 FPS Master you own?
Yes it is. I use it on all my third and first-person shooters on PS1, PS2, *Soon to be PS3*, Xbox, Xbox 360, Gamecube, and Wii
CRTGAMER wrote:Is this the PS2 FPS Master you own?
VGBlogger.com wrote:http://www.vgblogger.com/?p=4787
As an on-rails shooter, you probably wouldn’t expect much control depth from Dead Space Extraction, but this here control map shows otherwise. In addition to pointing and shooting, you’ll be able to twist the Wii Remote for alternate fire options, shake the remote to recharge your glow worm, melee attack with left and right swipes of the Nunchuk and so on. Nothing too complex, but still quite a bit more in-depth than the simple pointing, shooting and reloading of most light gun-type games.
DinnerX wrote:For N64 Goldeneye, there's a dual stick control option that uses two N64 controllers. Perfect Dark is the same way.Wikia wrote:http://goldeneye.wikia.com/wiki/Control_style#Dual_Controller_Styles
Dual controller style are designed to be played with a hand on the center grip of each controller. They allow for analog movement, turning, looking, and strafing whereas only two of those can be available at a time on a single controller.
There are special button combinations that function regardless of which control style has been selected.
Reverse Weapon Selection: Press the fire button while the weapon button is held down. Bond will switch through weapons backwards.
Faster Firing: Press the weapon button while the fire button is held down. This is especially useful with pistols.
Automatic Detonator: Press the weapon and action buttons while remote mines are the active weapon. Any mines Bond has placed will be detonated immediately.
Gamer Limit wrote:
http://gamerlimit.com/2010/01/metroid-p ... rs-edition
After releasing less than five months ago, MetaCritic’s highest-rated Wii game of 2009, Metroid Prime Trilogy, has stopped being published and shipped.
“Unfortunately, Metroid Prime Trilogy is no longer being shipped. Having said that, you may be able to find what you seek through the secondhand video game market,” says Nintendo, in an email response to Coffee with Games inquiry as to why the game was no longer available on Amazon.
Did you pick up your copy of an actual Collector’s Edition game yet? Better get on that. They’re going, going… gone.
Wiki wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Play_Control!
The New Play Control! series, known in Japan as Wii de Asobu (Wiiであそぶ?, lit. Play on Wii) is a program by Nintendo to upgrade several GameCube games for release on the Wii. These re-releases incorporate graphical improvements, which include 16:9 widescreen support. They also feature reconfigured controls to fit the Wii Remote.
Nintendo Everything wrote:http://nintendoeverything.com/22767/
Nintendo censors Metroid Prime Trilogy over small curse word
Metroid Prime 3: Corruption featured the first heavy dialogue voice overs in a Metroid game. Actually, the first few minutes of the game sported more exchanges than what can be seen in all of the other Metroid titles put together.
In one particular scene, Admiral Dane says, “Damn! They’re targeting the planetary-defense system.” Yet Nintendo felt compelled to censor “damn” for the re-release of Corruption in Metroid Prime Trilogy. When playing through the game on the Trilogy disc, the sentence can now be seen/heard as “No! They’re targeting the planetary-defense system.”
It’s a bit odd that Nintendo changed one little word this time around. Most gamers probably wouldn’t even think twice about listening to the word “damn” while playing. Seeing as how Nintendo deemed it perfectly fine to leave it in there the first time, it makes one wonder what motivated the censorship of that one word.