You'll still use your PSN ID, the real name will be a profile field so doesn't have to be unique.So those in favour of real names will be happy to change their real name if somebody else has it?
You'll still use your PSN ID, the real name will be a profile field so doesn't have to be unique.
What is the point then? And how do you confirm a childs real name? Stupid idea.
Its like facebook on psn, ok? Think of it like that.
He needs to earn more Platinums and Trophies
Also Real Info can lead to a plethora of situation including Cyber Bullying, I don't think Sony wants that battle
I'm annoyed that Youtube keeps asking me if I want to use my real name. I don't want this stuff.
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What I'm expecting the new PSN profiles to be like
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I'm annoyed that Youtube keeps asking me if I want to use my real name. I don't want this stuff.
nothankyou.jpg
I doubt you'll be forced to use your real name or link to FB. I think they even mentioned during the meeting that it old nicknames and avatars would still be available .
Um the guy in the press conference said it the entire experience was centered around real names, and importing FL from social networks. I don't think its optional.
Please, no one register the name, weedGOKU666. I think I want it.
What's juvenile about it? You have nickname here on GAF.I'm personally all for real names. One feature on XBL or PSN I've been asking for year is the ability to personalize names on my friends list.
I'm personally tired of seeing DarkLord206 (or whatever) is now online, when really I just want to see James is now online. It is just juvenile IMO.
It'll all be on the same PSN ID, you'll just be able to optionally (I assume) display your real name on the profile.Whats going to happen to trophy levels etc..?
Will we be able to convert our current user names to our real names, or will it be a clean slate?
Quoting myself from the bottom of the last page. Battle.net is a working model (working now anyway, after the initial furore) so hopefully that's what they'll look at.presumably you would see the real name only if the person is already friends with you on facebook (?)
has anyone here seen that recent episode of workaholics? if they made it so anyone could see a real world profile it will be exactly like that party that they are talking up the entire episode. cut to the end and it's a bunch of dorks standing around then the one girl arrives and says f that and leaves
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The way battle.net works at the moment is fine, so if Sony use that as their template I don't see the problem.
- Someone adds me with my email address, they see my real name
- Someone adds me with my PSN ID, they see my PSN ID
- Not on my friends list, they see my PSN ID
I actually think Sony articulated a very clear vision in the talk.
- When you are gaming with your friends, a handle mostly gets in the way. And you want to game with your friends, and there's value in the convenience of connecting with friends through your existing social networks. An avatar can still be valuable, but so can real-life photos. You'll want to share photos and videos with friends using existing social networks as well.
- On the other hand, when you're gaming with strangers online, you mostly want to use your handle for privacy purposes. You don't want to share your location, name, and photo obviously. If you upload a video to share to the public ("check out my high score"), you probably want it anonymous.
So a good system is one that accommodates both effectively, and I think this will.
I'm fine with real names as long as its only people in my circle of friends that can see it.
I actually think Sony articulated a very clear vision in the talk.
- When you are gaming with your friends, a handle mostly gets in the way. And you want to game with your friends, and there's value in the convenience of connecting with friends through your existing social networks. An avatar can still be valuable, but so can real-life photos. You'll want to share photos and videos with friends using existing social networks as well.
- On the other hand, when you're gaming with strangers online, you mostly want to use your handle for privacy purposes. You don't want to share your location, name, and photo obviously. If you upload a video to share to the public ("check out my high score"), you probably want it anonymous.
So a good system is one that accommodates both effectively, and I think this will.
Am I the only one who likes to keep their family/professional life and online gaming life seperate?
From the responses in here, you're clearly not. The chances of this NOT being an opt-in setting are incredibly slim - just ask Blizzard.Am I the only one who likes to keep their family/professional life and online gaming life seperate?
No you're not. Not a fan of this trend at all. I don't even use the same made up name on different games.
I like the idea of real names so people aren't assholes online. Anonymity safeguards assholes
To my knowledge, people will be complete idiotic asshats regardless of whether or not their name is attached.Obviously it's optional, but in a way, I wouldn't mind it. I almost wish it were mandatory. Imagine how many of the assholes you'd eliminate if you stripped away the anonymity! I think people tend to be much more well behaved on a site like Facebook than social media outlets that promote using a fake handle.
I know they can't possibly make you "be yourself" online in any capacity, but I wouldn't mind the experiment of seeing what could happen if they did.
Furthermore, users can connect their Facebook account with Sony Entertainment Network account. Through PS4, users are able to deepen their connections through co-op play or "cross-game chat".
I'm annoyed that Youtube keeps asking me if I want to use my real name. I don't want this stuff.
nothankyou.jpg
Yeah, my social life does not have anything to do with me playing video games. They're pretty much polar opposites.Am I the only one who likes to keep their family/professional life and online gaming life seperate? It is actually getting more and more annoying that every game wants me to link it to facebook and twitter.
A. No one gives a damn that I reached level 5 in some JRPG. They are just trying to use me as an advertisement.
B. My uncle, mother in law, and some dude I sat next to on the bus in high school don't need to know my Charmander evolved
I am probably a lot more reclusive, anti-social, (and older) than most, but using real names turns me off. It 'may' stop like 1% of the assholes that make it so I can't play XBox Live with the sound up when the kids are in the room, but am I really going to do the research to find that 13 year old who just called me a "@#%^&#@$" and tell his parents?