1784: Follower of Black Heart

It was Sony’s PlayStation Experience keynote presentation today. I haven’t yet caught up on all the bits of news that came out of it, but the snippets I have heard so far all confirm something that I’ve been thinking for quite a while now: in the new generation of gaming hardware (PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Wii U) Sony is going to be the one to beat. And the other two (well, one; we’ve established Nintendo likes doing its own thing and bugger what the other two are up to) are going to have their work cut out for them.

Sony’s got a pretty comprehensive-looking gaming package at present, and one that covers a number of different markets. Speaking as someone who has not yet jumped into the next generation of hardware wholeheartedly — though I do own a Wii U — the PlayStation 4 is an infinitely more enticing prospect than the Xbox One. It’s still not quite enough to make me want to rush out and buy one just yet — I’m still waiting for that absolute must-have game that I can’t get anywhere else, and bear in mind my definition of “must-have” is somewhat different from the mainstream — but I’m getting closer and closer with every new announcement that comes out of Sony.

Speaking more objectively, though, the PlayStation 4 has a solid lineup of titles. Many of them are available on Xbox One as well, of course, but the PS4 versions are, in most cases, technically superior, running at better resolutions in many cases. As for exclusives, Sony has this pretty much stitched up. The Xbox One lineup of exclusives is a moribund array of unimaginative titles that tend to fit into the neat triple-A pigeonholes of “killing things”, “driving things” or “doing sports with things” — there are a few exceptions, of course, such as SWERY’s intriguing new project — whereas the PS4’s lineup is vibrant, interesting and, importantly, worldwide, with Japanese developers rapidly jumping on board Sony’s train even as they continue to eye Microsoft warily after the Redmond giant’s two abject failures in the Far East.

The PS4 has the mainstream market pretty well stitched up, then, it seems — although with titles like Hyperdimension Neptunia Victory II and its ilk coming to the platform, it looks set to follow in the PS3’s footsteps and provide a great home for more niche titles, too, not to mention the array of excellent independent titles that are making the jump from PC to PS4, too.

And then there’s the Vita. Sony still doesn’t make a big deal about the Vita at events like this, which annoys some people, but really, a big keynote speech isn’t the place to shout about how great the Vita is. The reason? Vita has carved out a rather wonderful little niche for itself as arguably the best place to go for… well, niche games. Highly creative indie titles? Check. Fanservicey Japanese games? Check. Non-fanservicey Japanese games? Check. Access to a staggering back catalogue of brilliant games from the PS1 and PSP eras? Check.

Developers and publishers alike are really starting to get a handle on what makes the Vita tick, and what those who own one like doing with their time. Rather than attempting to continue pushing the frankly dumb “triple-A in your pocket!” angle — the whole point of triple-A is that it’s spectacular, and consequently built for the big screen — Vita devs and publishers are now embracing the fact that Vita is a handheld device whose players like the freedom to play either for a short session over lunch, or for more protracted periods of free time. The best Vita games are built with this in mind: FuturLab’s Velocity 2X, for example, features lightning-fast, short levels that encourage you to replay for the best times and scores; even Hyperdimension Neptunia Re;Birth1 which I’ve been playing recently is eminently handheld-friendly thanks to its short and snappy dungeons punctuated by clearly signposted event scenes that you move onto when you’re good and ready rather than when you least expect it.

And let’s not forget the PS3 in all this, still managing to remain relevant despite its successor having been on the market for a year now. Today we learned that Sega is bringing the much-requested Yakuza 5 to the West next year, and the new installment in the Persona series is coming to PS3 as well as PS4. On top of that, publishers like NIS America, Xseed Games, Aksys Games and their ilk are continuing to localise a wealth of interesting (and occasionally outlandish) Japanese titles for the Western market, so while those continue to flow in my PS3 won’t be getting put away any time soon.

All this may sound rather fanboyish and perhaps it is, but the fact is, Microsoft has consistently failed to make me want to pay any attention to the Xbox One whatsoever — the first thing that still springs to mind when I think of the Xbox One is the stupid “Snap” functionality, which is something I don’t think I’ve ever felt I wanted from a console — while Sony continually intrigues and excites me with each new announcement they make.

All it’ll take is one great game to get me to grab an Xbox One, though, but at the moment I see that happening on PS4 first, by quite a considerably margin.