E3 2010: Best and Worst of Nintendo's E3 Press Conference

Demian_-_bitmobbio
Wednesday, June 16, 2010

The Wii's casual appeal plays big in Wal-Mart and on Wall Street, but exercise games and Vitality Sensors don't go over as well with E3's hardcore gamer crowd. Nintendo hit the right balance this year, though -- for every dancing game and sports compilation the company showed, it announced the return of multiple beloved franchises, with 2D platformers especially abundant.

Last year's biggest groaner, the Vitality Sensor, wasn't even name checked this year. Instead, we got the 3DS. I'll take that trade any day.


Zelda: Skyward Sword

When in doubt, blame the Wi-Fi: Nintendo wasted little time (well, aside from a brief opening lecture from President Reggie Fils-Aime) in rolling out The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword. Mario-creator Shigeru Miyamoto busted through a wall in the tradition of the Kool-Aid Man to deliver a live gameplay demo. Unfortunately, it didn't go over quite as planned -- Miyamoto needed about 20 slingshot shots to finally kill a spider, and when he pulled out the bow and arrow Link spun in circles while looking at his shoes. Miyamoto pleaded Wi-Fi interference. The new whip weapon looked pretty fun, but control tweaks aside, I'm a bit worried about this Zelda isn't different enough.

 

Manage expectations: When Fils-Aime delivered the line, "Our goal is to provide new experiences for everyone," we knew what was coming: a sports game compilation (Mario-themed, at least) and another damn dancing game.

Put the gun down: News of a new GoldenEye 007 game starring Daniel Craig was exciting, if about eight years late -- but then again, it's on the Wii. What was the last good shooter you played on Wii?

epic Mickey

Best not-exactly-new IP: Deus Ex-creator Warren Spector showed off Epic Mickey, an action-platformer-RPG hybrid that lets you choose to create or destroy objects in the world via paint/paint thinner. How you balance those mechanics will act like a morality system. The most interesting part, though, was a Steamboat Willie-themed 'travel stage,' a black-and-white 2D-platformer level that makes me think that the other classic, Disney-themed levels could be quite cool.

Speaking of 2D platformers: Nintendo really catered to the old-time fans with a pair of 2D platformers, Kirby's Epic Yarn and Donkey Kong Country Returns. Despite a weak lead in from Fils-Aime ("Should Kirby stick to his knitting? Or spin a yarn that has never been spun before?") the fans were freaking out for Kirby's new style and car/UFO/giant-robot-morphin' moves. The crowd loved DK Country Returns (from acclaimed developer Retro) as well; both are due out by the end of the year.

Best hardware announcement of E3: 3DS, far and away. Sony is rushing into 3D for consoles before the technology is at the no-glasses stage, but Nintendo's already there, if only on a handheld. The 3DS might have more potential for interesting gameplay innovation than Kinect or Move at this point, and it'll be of the non-Yoga game variety, too. Can't wait to try the outward-facing 3D camera, either.

The slow-burn rumor that finally came true: A new Kid Icarus, subtitled Uprising. We've been hearing murmurs about a new episode in this long-dormant franchise for year, and here it is. While we only got to see 2D movies of the game in action, the visual improvement over regular DS games was obvious (assuming it's representative of the final product).

 
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Comments (5)
Default_picture
June 16, 2010

I know we had this discussion already..the Zelda franchise needs a evolution, a face lift. New playable characters, new world, new story. The hell with Link...it's the same old thing from my eyes.

4540_79476034228_610804228_1674526_2221611_n
June 16, 2010

I agree. Zelda hasn't had that epic feeling since Ocarina of Time.  I realize Zelda is a huge franchise for Nintendo, but isn't it about time for link to hang up  his boomerang...permanently?

Media
June 17, 2010

Well, maybe we'll see an evolution. Really kind of difficult to tell if they're heading in that direction from a demo that apparently focuses almost completely on combat.

Profile_pic4
June 17, 2010

I dunno guys, when I think of Zelda, I don't think of the franchise the same way I think of others desperate for a retirement party (Lara Croft and Tony Hawk, anyone?).

People had similar grumblings for Mario when Sunshine released, and now look at our wee plumbing pal.  He's flying high with the fantastic pair of Galaxy games and a great side scroller reinvention of Super Mario Bros.  Now he apparently even plays basketball like Bill Clinton a la NBA Jams.

Maybe Zelda needs a new side scroller?  A what-we-could-do-now version of the original Zelda?  I would be all over that.

Default_picture
June 17, 2010

@Brandon it wouldn't be a zelda game then.  just make a new game.  You want your retro boner stroked, but you still want new stuff.  You can't have your cake and eat it too.  If you want a modern zelda game then play assassins creed 2, if you want retrobonerstoking then play zelda games.

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