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Wii

North America

Wii Sports Resort

by Carmine Red - July 20, 2008, 3:20 pm EDT
Total comments: 6

Don't call it Wii Sports 2. Well… okay, you can call it that.

Nintendo calls the game Wii Sports Resort, but the best way to frame this game in the proper context is to imagine it as Wii Sports 2. Nintendo had three different "sports" for attendees to try out at E3, each recalling memories of similar experiences from other Nintendo games.

The simplest one was Disc Dog, a game of Frisbee with a canine friend that elicited memories of the DS Nintendogs game. Throw a Frisbee and your dog will run it down. If your dog catches it, you get awarded points based on how close the catch was to a displayed marker. Then the dog fetches the disc back to you, and you can recover it by pointing at it and pressing the A button.

However, Disc Dog was also a demonstration of the additional capabilities that the Wii MotionPlus add-on brought to the table. Not only did the game track whether my arm was in front of me, to my left, or to my right, but the booth attendant also encouraged me to witness the game tilting the Frisbee at a ratio equivalent to how I turned my own wrist.

Throwing the Frisbee was also surprising: you don't press and release a button to do so as Wii Sports Bowling had you do. Instead, the game automatically chooses the moment at which you'd actually release the disc in real life. I didn't have an extended period of time with the demo, but this mechanism felt natural and responsive for the duration of my session.

The swordplay demo was also a showcase for the benefits of the Wii MotionPlus. Nintendo claimed one-to-one controls, and this was it. Players hold the Wii Remote in front of them (the Wii MotionPlus extends the Wii Remote long enough for a two-handed grip if someone has small enough hands), point the cursor at the center of the screen to calibrate, and they're good to go!

The demo started off with explaining the controls, much like Wii Boxing explains the controls for first time players. The sword follows the player's movements and the tilting or twisting of the Wii Remote and Wii MotionPlus. It even knows when the sword is being held upside down! But merely moving it around isn't an attack; the player must swing it hard and fast to elicit a real slash. This slash can be in any direction: left, right, up, or down. Unfortunately, it doesn't appear as if the game supports thrusting. However, players can block by holding down the B button and positioning the sword to realistically intercept incoming blows. The game lets players practice all of this by offering wooden logs and giant pencils which are sliced into pieces and fall apart depending on the exact location and direction of the sword slash.

But once the real match starts between the two duelists, it gets exhausting; much more tiring than Wii Sports Boxing and just as frenzied. Situated on a circular platform high above the water, two opponents fight three rounds and try to knock the other off of the platform with a flurry of attacks and strategic blocking. Overhead slashes were clearly the strongest and knocked opponents back the furthest, but this may be because swinging in that direction naturally yields the most force. Players trying out the game seemed to periodically choose to attack in a series of frenzied blows, quickly hitting opponents again and again in quick succession. This made blocking attacks important not only to throw the opponent off-balance, but to nullify these attacks before the player gets knocked into the drink. However, each round ends in a tie if no one gets knocked off within the time limit. If a fourth tie-breaker round is necessary, the stage shrinks to a size barely enough to hold the combatants, and whoever gets knocked off loses the entire match.

The third section from Wii Sports Resort that Nintendo had on display recalled the Nintendo 64 classic Wave Race 64 (or its GameCube sequel Wave Race: Blue Storm). The player's Mii stands on a watercraft and players hold the Wii Remote and Nunchuk as if they are holding the handlebars themselves. Players can tilt the imaginary handlebars left or right to turn their vehicle. They can tilt back slightly, tilt forward slightly, activate a boost by twisting the Wii Remote as if revving an engine, and hold A to accelerate.

The controls were really responsive, and I adapted to them immediately. The point of this demo was to steer through a series of alternating red and blue gates for the highest score possible. As soon as I passed one gate, the next gate would start counting down from ten on a giant electronic board attached to its top. Pass through the gate with seven seconds left, and you get seven points. Eventually, the waves started getting choppier, and my watercraft actually caught some air, but unfortunately, I was not able to dive under the surface of the water as I remember doing in the Wave Race series. The course was longer than I anticipated, and by the end, my arms were actually tired from suspending the Wii Remote and Nunchuk in front of me for the entire session.

Is Wii Sports Resort worthy of being referred to as Wii Sports 2? From these three games, the additional control possibilities that the Wii MotionPlus offered, and the promise of more when the game releases in early 2009, the answer seems to be yes.

Talkback

Nick DiMolaNick DiMola, Staff AlumnusJuly 20, 2008

The positive impressions of this game make me really happy. I'm glad to see Nintendo has designed a compelling reason (Motion Plus) to create a Wii Sports 2. It's too bad that we still have quite a while before it hits retail.

StogiJuly 21, 2008

Quote:

Eventually, the waves started getting choppier, and my watercraft actually caught some air, but unfortunately, I was not able to dive under the surface of the water as I remember doing in the Wave Race series.

I hope to god this returns. Luckily, the creator mentioned how this "mini-game" will surpass Blue Storm and I love that game, so it most likely won't be without it.

GoldenPhoenixJuly 21, 2008

I'm excited for this game, too bad people forget what a surprise it was that it was actually announced. This game looks like it could really show the FULL potential of the Wiimote!

Ian SaneJuly 21, 2008

Quote:

This game looks like it could really show the FULL potential of the Wiimote!

Show the full potential of the Wiimote... by requiring extra hardware!!! YES!!!! ;)

DAaaMan64July 21, 2008

I agree with Stogi and GP, I'm very okay with this game.

NWR_pap64Pedro Hernandez, Contributing WriterJuly 21, 2008

Quote from: Ian

Quote:

This game looks like it could really show the FULL potential of the Wiimote!

Show the full potential of the Wiimote... by requiring extra hardware!!! YES!!!! ;)

Which will be packed in with the game! HELL YEAH!!!! ;)

All sarcasm aside, here's how I see the motion plus doohickey.

Nintendo probably wanted true 1:1 control since day one. They wanted to shock and amaze the gaming world.

The thing is that theory doesn't always translate to reality. So while they got SOME 1:1 working, it wasn't up to their standards. They couldn't delay the Wii any longer, so they released it as it. Granted, the original technology worked greatly, and many developers used it to its potential.

The Wii being a proven success has helped them go back to the drawing board, and with plenty of money to experiment the idea was one again analyzed and studied and thus the motionplus was born.

If you are going to have a cynical view of it, yeah, it sucks that in order for the Wiimote to fully reach its potential an attachment is needed. But thing about technology in general.

Has there ever been an electronic device that reaches its potential since day one? Never, that's why companies are constantly re-inventing their products, adding new features, models, designs and such.

In theory, the original iPod could have played videos, games and show photos. But simply put, the technology didn't exist till much later. That's why we have so many iPod models out there. All of them do the same thing (play songs) but each has different features that meets the creators, and the consumers' demands.

Same deal with computers. If you were to constantly upgrade your computer you would technically have to replace your computer once every year!

One other important thing is price. New technology is always expensive, for both the manufacturer and the customer.

Now, let's pretend that Nintendo HAD come up with the Wiimotionplus in 2006. It would have probably driven up the price of the Wii and the controllers, meaning that it would be cause Nintendo and the buyers a lot of headaches.

So in order to prevent the Wii from being too expensive, the technology had to be dropped.

Now, with the Wii being a big hit, the time is right to introduce the new gadget.

You can't deny that it being bundled with the game is a nice deal.

So looking at it cynically, yeah it sucks. Looking at it REALISTICALLY though, it makes sense, for better or for worse.

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Wii Sports Resort Box Art

Genre Sports
Developer Nintendo
Players1 - 4

Worldwide Releases

na: Wii Sports Resort
Release Jul 26, 2009
PublisherNintendo
RatingEveryone
jpn: Wii Sports Resort
Release Jun 25, 2009
PublisherNintendo
RatingAll Ages
eu: Wii Sports Resort
Release Jul 24, 2009
PublisherNintendo
Rating7+
aus: Wii Sports Resort
Release Jul 23, 2009
PublisherNintendo
RatingGeneral
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