radioheadrule83 said:Are there any impressions of this from folks here who went to E3? How the hell does it work?
SantaCruZer said:miyamoto translation plz
sp0rsk said:Its hard. it appears they changed a bit on the gui since e3.
Basically you use the microphone to command your units(direction, change arrangements and stuff) and the controller to bounce the odama around. You can use the odama to roll over your opponents (or in some cases your own units) or hit certain things to give your side the advantage, like clog up a dam so they can cross a river and so on. The goal is to get the bell to the other side of the map. This is a tough ass game though. Its real fun though.
WordAssassin said:I wanna know when the fuck Doshin the Giant is coming out in the US. They're bringing over some wacky military pinball game that requires a mike, they're bringing out Homeworld, they're bringing out Electroplankton. Where is fucking Doshin?
But, it came out in Europe. It's translated and everything. I want to know why it never came out in America. Fucking CUBIVORE came out here, and not Doshin?Shiggy said:I think Param was closed as a part of Marigul. I really wonder where that 1080°Snowboarding developer went...
Kobun Heat said:They're bringing out Homeworld?
sp0rsk said:Its hard. it appears they changed a bit on the gui since e3.
Basically you use the microphone to command your units(direction, change arrangements and stuff) and the controller to bounce the odama around. You can use the odama to roll over your opponents (or in some cases your own units) or hit certain things to give your side the advantage, like clog up a dam so they can cross a river and so on. The goal is to get the bell to the other side of the map. This is a tough ass game though. Its real fun though.
sp0rsk said:Its hard. it appears they changed a bit on the gui since e3.
Basically you use the microphone to command your units(direction, change arrangements and stuff) and the controller to bounce the odama around. You can use the odama to roll over your opponents (or in some cases your own units) or hit certain things to give your side the advantage, like clog up a dam so they can cross a river and so on. The goal is to get the bell to the other side of the map. This is a tough ass game though. Its real fun though.
sp0rsk said:Its hard. it appears they changed a bit on the gui since e3.
Basically you use the microphone to command your units(direction, change arrangements and stuff) and the controller to bounce the odama around. You can use the odama to roll over your opponents (or in some cases your own units) or hit certain things to give your side the advantage, like clog up a dam so they can cross a river and so on. The goal is to get the bell to the other side of the map. This is a tough ass game though. Its real fun though.