Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Sports Champions

Making tennis fun again! Well, for tennis.

Marty Demarest
MORE INFO

PLAYER.4_1.jpg
Sports Champions
Rated Everyone 10
PlayStation 3

This winter, I’m reviewing the whole pack of motion-sensitive games — from Wii Sports to Kinect Sports, I’m testing out the full range of gaming’s latest trend. And since all the games have some version of tennis, I’m calling the event the Pong-Off. May the best Pong win.  

Sports Champions is more than a motion-sensitivity demonstration for the Sony PlayStation Move. Like every other sports game, Sports Champions is a compilation of various sporting events. And since the PlayStation Move is pretty much a grown-up version of the Wii, Sports Champions is like a sophisticated version of Wii Sports, with bocce instead of bowling and table tennis instead of tennis.

Sports Champions isn’t the most sophisticated sports sim around. It’s stocked with the usual avatars-of-various-ethnicities. But it lacks any character-building system beyond unlockable costumes and mini games because, in Sports Champions, the avatar is modeled on my body. When my in-game athlete stretches his arms to draw an arrow in combat, I’m doing the same quasi-yoga pose. And when I battle in gladiator combat, I’m really ducking and jumping and parrying and thrusting.

The PlayStation Move is a very sensitive controller — like the Wii Remote with a liberal arts degree. Angle and poise matter because the Move understands my arms are attached to my body. In table tennis, if the angle of the controller changes, then my on-screen avatar adjusts his stance. Every subtle move of my hand is reflected onscreen.

When I try a backhand shot, the game catches the slight twist of my wrist and I end up hitting the ball off the table. When I approach the ball clean and square, I’m often able to overpower the other side of the table.

When I get good enough to beat the computer in “Table Tennis,” then I know that I’m actually gaining some physical skills, not just accumulating points. And my opponents adjust to my growing degree of skill. Some of them favor rhythm-busting long volleys. Others are up-close powerhouses while some have trick serves. Playing my way through the game’s challenges introduces me to the sophisticated technology behind Sports Champions. As I watch my in-game skills become more graceful and subtle, I watch my real-world actions gain some of the same finesse. I’m not just playing Pong. Pong is playing me.

THE GOOD: The PlayStation Move controller has become my go-to PS3 controller of choice. The simple tilt-and-flick navigation is more intuitive and accurate than the Kinect’s arm-waving and waiting. Sports Champions demonstrates there’s still a lot of potential in motion sensitivity. We may not need to abandon our controllers if we can just make them better.

THE BAD: I understand this game isn’t about unlocking character statistics. But it would have been nice if there were more character costumes, funny props, color schemes, etc. The designs and details of Sports Champions are too generic. Earlier this year, ModNation Racers demonstrated that the more customization a game offers players, the merrier it is to play.

THE BOTTOM LINE: In the lineup of motion-sensitive sports variety games, Sports Champions is victorious.

Also in The Player

VideoGames

Minecraft

Adventure and survival too often give way to mindless crafts in this building-block simulator.

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, February 8,2012
Videogames

Invizimals: Shadow Zone

There's nothing worth seeing in Invizimals: Shadow Zone.

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, February 1,2012
Videogames

Tekken Hybrid

Pigtails and power tools. Ah, anime!

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, January 25,2012
Videogame

Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3

Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 is the ultimate version of an already solid fighting game.

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, January 18,2012
VIDEOGAMES

Harvest Moon: The Tale of Two Towns

Alpacas and horses and cows - oh my.

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, January 11,2012

Also By Marty Demarest

The Player

Call of Duty: Black Ops

Already a solid shooter, Call of Duty branches out into artistry with “Zombies.”

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, December 1,2010
The Player

Assassin’s Creed II

Sluggish and simplistic, Assassin’s Creed II may be the most artless work of art ever to emerge from the Renaissance.

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, January 20,2010

Shaken and stirred

Marty Demarest |
Wednesday, March 14,2001

5 Shows Worth Watching

Marty Demarest |
Thursday, March 11,2004

About This Project...

Marty Demarest |
Thursday, January 23,2003


I love this game! It actually gives you the illusion that you are actually playing each sport. here is another article that´s talking about this game..

http://playstationlifestyle.net/2010/12/22/best-playstation-move-game-of-2010/ Dec 23, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
Close
Close
Close