See also: Soulcalibur IV,
CES 2008,
LittleBigPlanet,
Fracture
CES 2008 Top Stories
CES '08: Soulcalibur IV Hands-On
Namco shows off playable Soulcalibur IV in Vegas and announces some sci-fi guests for the fighter's roster.Full Story »
CES '08: LittleBigPlanet Update
Sony shows off a bit more of one of the PS3's most anticipated titles for 2008.Full Story »
CES '08: Fracture Updated Look
LucasArts shows off another transforming level of its exciting third-person sci-fi shooter.Full Story »
CES '08: PSP GPS, Camera US-bound in '08; keyboard revealed
Sony confirms two accessories for its portable will go on sale in North America by year's end; data-entry add-on due in 18 months.Full Story »
Inside CES 2008

January 10, 2008
Just returned in from CES 08 last night. This year's show was light on games but that doesn't mean there wasn't plenty of cool stuff to see. Here's a glimpse:
01. The Dual View System from DLP Technologies. Back when I was a kid, Texas Instruments was known for cruddy calculators and a huge corporate campus in Dallas. Now, annoying commercials aside (why is that little girl standing with an elephant!?), DLP is doing cool stuff with game displays; case in point, the Dual View System. It's hard to explain without seeing it but essentially it allows two game images (running out of two separate game systems) to be superimposed on the same screen. Then, wearing special goggles (which felt more like sunglasses, really) one player can differentiate his or her game, and the other player, the other image. It's cool stuff and, while not necessarily technology I would personally use, you've got to admire the technical genius behind it.
Seven more, after the jump...
CONTINUE »January 7, 2008
Graphics manufacturer ATI just gave us a preview of its new R680 graphics card that will be arriving this spring. The exact product specifications, pricing, and release date are all under NDA, but they're letting us post pictures of the reference card. The card has two GPUs on a single board and will retail for $400-$500:

January 7, 2008
We dropped by the Nyko suite at the Hilton to take a look at the peripheral manufacturer's product line-up for 2008. The company is showing accessories for all of the major gaming platforms, but a few of the Wii and PlayStation 3 accessories immediately caught our attention.

We had a chance to get hands-on with the Wireless Nunchuck that Nyko first announced late last year. The Nyko Nunchuck has the same functionality as the Nintendo Nunchuk, but the Nyko version is wireless and has its own power button and blue LED power indicator light. The accessory also comes with a wrist-strap to reduce flight risk.
CONTINUE »January 6, 2008
Last year's CES yielded the 108-inch TV as the piece de resistance for many technophiles. It was gaudy, gigantic, and a bit excessive; exactly what we love about CES. Most of us would be hard pressed to find a place for such a display in our homes. Finding this burgeoning television in a sea of automotive customization, recombinant innovation, and incrementally improved features may have been harder than one might have expected. Finding game content should be easier this year.
Last year's coverage was representative of what the game industry had on display. This trip down memory lane reminds us just how excited we were (as consumers) to see Crysis at the time. We all marveled at seeing Symphony of the Night, the first XBLA game to weigh in with a download size greater than 50MB, running in Microsoft's booth. And for some of us, those CES stage demos seemed very similar to the E3 stage demos we had grown to love. Past coverage also helps place more recent events into proper context.
With the streamlining and recalendaring of E3, this year's CES comes at a time when many of the large game companies can capture not only the enthusiast press's attention, but also the mainstream press's coverage to speak to consumers about how the latest-and-greatest toys they just purchased will be outmoded in a matter of months (or minutes). No wonder the rumor mill is turning out tales of IPTV-infused consoles, another Xbox 360 SKU, or a possible end to the HD format wars. In the consumer electronics space, CES is D-Day for many companies. They need to bring in the troops to get coverage of exactly what they will be doing this year to reshape consumer electronics . . . unless they are Apple.
This year, not unlike past years, I look forward to more game-centered coverage. Show the latest batch of downloadable console games, let us fantasize about playing them in rich HD, and for the love . . . Microsoft, please tell us when the Tron games are coming to XBLA. Getting sucked into a computer is what CES is all about.
CONTINUE »



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