Tag: play

  • Hands-on: Nintendo Switch Sports runs with the joyful play of Wii Sports

    Hands-on: Nintendo Switch Sports runs with the joyful play of Wii Sports

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    Nintendo Switch Sports is the successor to the most mainstream sports video game of all time, Wii Sports. And Nintendo hopes this version will make gamers and non-gamers alike get excited about playing sports on the Switch.

    This could be a big title for the Switch, which Nintendo said in February sold more than 103.54 million units as of December 31, a huge number of units since March 2017. The Switch milestone meant that it surpassed the Wii’s previous record of 101.63 million consoles sold. And Wii Sports was a huge accelerant for the Wii.

    The new Nintendo Switch Sports title will launch on April 29 and have six sports played with Joy-Con controllers. The sports include Soccer, Volleyball, Bowling, Tennis, Badminton, and Chambara (Swordplay). I was able to play all of them briefly at a demo this week at Nintendo’s U.S. office in Redwood City, California. Switch Sports takes place in a big area subbed Spocco arena where you can choose any of the six events.

    You can style your avatar Mii in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    You can create your avatar, doing it quickly or spending as much time as you want on it. You can create your own Sports Mii character and choose among a lot of options for hairstyle and faces. The resulting characters are far more expressive than the old Miis.

    With Switch Sports, you can play in the same room with people on a split screen, as I did with the bowling game. Or you can play against online players with different configurations. For instance, you can play with two players in your own home against two on the internet.

    Players can try to reach the pro League in every sport. You can redeem ports you earn for in-game rewards such as outfits, sports accessories, and other gear. The selection of items will rotate each week. Later this year, Nintendo plans to add a seventh sport with a new golf mini-game.

    Soccer

    Timing is the name of the game is soccer shootouts in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    We started with the Soccer mini-game. In the mostly empty building, Nintendo’s demo people started out showing me the Leg Strap accessory (from Ring Fit Adventure) that strapped around my right thigh. You take one of the Joy-Con controllers and put it in the strap and it detects your leg movements. I used it to play a shootout kicking a ball at a goal. The game character kicks the ball at you, and your job is to then kick the flying ball into the goal. You can play either left-footed or right-footed, as you wish.

    With this Leg Strap attached, I could try to kick the soccer ball as it was coming at me on the screen. But this was perhaps the weakest demo to start with, as it was pretty hard to judge the timing for the ball as it came at you. It was very easy to kick to early or kick too late. So the only way to really judge properly was by trying to figure out the size of the ball as it approached and the speed. This was total guesswork, but I think most people could get used to the timing eventually. The problem, I think, is that it’s not intuitive when you should kick.

    The rest of the games I played with one or two Joy-Cons in my hands, and I didn’t see any of that problem with the handheld controllers at all. There is also a mode where two players can play with Joy-Con controllers against two others in soccer matches.

    Bowling

    Bowling was never so fast as it is in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    The bowling mini-game was good. It cleverly saves time by allowing all players — three in this case — to bowl all at the same time. It split the screen into three parts and we all concentrated on our own part of the screen while mimicking throwing bowling balls down our lanes. It seemed pretty accurate in detecting exactly where I was throwing the ball.

    I had to figure out to keep holding on to one of the buttons. If I let go of that button, I would drop the bowling ball on the ground. Even when I rolled the ball, I was supposed to keep holding the button. That wasn’t at all intuitive. But it was quite easy to line up my body against the bowling pins and let loose. I could spin the ball using a flick of my wrist that the Joy-Con captured quite accurately. Overall, in my first game, I was able to get a number of spares and strikes.

    Volleyball

    Volleyball is complex but lots of fun in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    Volleyball was a little more complicated to play, but it was a lot more intuitive than kicking the ball in Soccer. We played a mode where we had one CPU player and one human player on one side, playing against the same on the other side. The tutorial walked me through the complex moves.

    There were a few different moves to master. First, you had to learn how to serve. You did that by holding your hands together with one Joy-Con. You tossed the ball up by raising your hands and then you served it by slamming downward.

    That sends the ball over the net to the other team. To receive that ball, you have to swoop upward with your hands as if you were hitting a real volleyball. If you get the timing right, you can set the ball for your net players to spike it. If you miss, then the other team scores a point. You don’t really have to worry about positioning your player as the game does that for you automatically. All you have to worry about is hitting the ball with the right timing.

    Once you set the ball, the second player (or, in one-versus-one mode, you) can jump up in the air with an upward movement and then spike the ball with a downward movement. All of these moves were fairly complex to learn, but they were all very intuitive. I was able to jump right into rallies in the game as I battled one-versus-one against another player in the same room. During the gameplay, the CPU player handled one of the moves and then I moved in to do the next move.

    If your opponent is getting ready to spike, you can also raise your hands upward at the right moment and attempt to block the spike. Your player at the net will jump up and block it if the timing is precise. You can get into a good pattern of bump, set, spike, and block over and over again. Depending on how your timing is and the direction you move, you can spike into the right spot of the court where your opponent can’t get to it. Like I said, this one was really well done.

    Tennis

    Tennis volleys can get intense in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    Tennis was also pretty intuitive to learn. You swing upward to start a serve and swing down to serve it. It’s a little like Foosball in that you actively control both players in a doubles match on the court. If you swing at a ball, the character on your side who is closest to the ball will take the swing at the ball. This is where the more accurate Joy-Con hardware shines compared to the old Wii Sports Tennis. You can play back and forth for a long time as each player will likely have an easier time getting the timing right on swings.

    Badminton

    Badminton is more intense than Tennis in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    Badminton was a lot like tennis, but it was faster action as the shuttlecock moves fast. You have to swing up, down, or sideways to hit it right. Timing matters. You do a gentle upward stroke to serve a lob over the net first. Then you can do gentle counter lobs by holding down a button. If your opponent isn’t paying attention, the lob could catch them off guard. Or you can use a slam stroke to finish an opponent off with a fast slam.

    Chambara

    Chambara is swordfighting in Nintendo Switch Sports.

    Chambara is swordfighting that takes place on a relatively small round arena. If you step off, you fall off the platform into water. The game allows you to use one or two Joy-Cons. I played with just one. You put both hands on the Joy-Con as if you were holding the base of a samurai sword. (The blade isn’t sharp.)

    It’s pretty intuitive to swing it overhead in a downward slice or sideways in a horizontal attack. If you hold down a button, then you can block the attack. But here’s the weird thing. If your opponent is holding the blade vertically, you can’t block it by holding your blade horizontally. You also have to hold your blade vertically to block it.

    That didn’t really make sense to me, but so be it. You can switch between offensively attacking or blocking just by engaging the button. Then the instincts of swordfighting take over. You can bash rapidly at your opponent in the hopes of getting some quick strikes in. But if the opponent blocks you, then you get stunned and can’t move. That opens the way for a counterattack that scores a point on you.

    If someone is blocking you vertically, you can swing sideways to break their guard. You can also do a diagonal stroke that’s harder to get right but also harder to block. I managed to win in a sudden death round in my first Chambara match. Not bad for the first time at all. And overall, all of the games are easy to learn.

    At the end of it all, I was pretty sweaty. And I had to drink water in between each round. I think Nintendo will have another big hit on its hands with Nintendo Switch Sports.

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  • Ben Simmons workout gives Nets hope he can play in postseason

    Ben Simmons workout gives Nets hope he can play in postseason

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  • Why time is running out for Ben Simmons to play this season

    Why time is running out for Ben Simmons to play this season

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    Sign up here to get Inside the Nets delivered to your inbox each Saturday morning.

    The clock is ticking down on any hope Ben Simmons suits up for Brooklyn this season.

    After first holding out while with the Philadelphia 76ers, citing mental health issues, Simmons then suffered a back injury while ramping up to play in the wake of engineering a blockbuster trade to Brooklyn on Feb. 10. As a result, Simmons hasn’t played a second this season, and as he now deals with a herniated L-4 disc, a league source acknowledged it’s looking unlikely he will at this point.

    The good news is that Simmons has seen enough improvement with his back recently to give the Nets and their sidelined All-Star hope that he can at least avoid surgery this offseason.

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  • The Weeknd says he won’t play Coachella without Kanye’s $8M paycheck, more

    The Weeknd says he won’t play Coachella without Kanye’s $8M paycheck, more

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    Today in celebrity news, there’s a negotiation, a “fake” wedding and a pop-punk engagement.

    The post The Weeknd says he won’t play Coachella without Kanye’s $8M paycheck, more appeared first on REPORT DOOR.

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  • “I can play through a little pain”

    “I can play through a little pain”

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  • WordleBot analyzes Wordle to help you play better

    WordleBot analyzes Wordle to help you play better

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    The New York Times, which has owned Wordle since January, has created a new tool to analyze solutions for the viral word game. Using statistics — math! — the WordleBot tool scores your completed Wordle solutions “for luck and skill on a scale from 0 to 99,” according to the company. It’ll then use that information to tell you how you could have improved your solutions to solve Wordle in as few words as possible. The New York Times says it could help you improve how you play.

    It works through a web browser, just like Wordle. First, you’ll need to play Wordle, and then, using that same device, visit the WordleBot website. It’ll find your most recent Wordle, and pull it up. (If it doesn’t you can also upload a screenshot of your completed board.) From there, it shows you some stats. Then the tool runs through your guesses, row by row, to determine how many solutions your guesses cut out.

    comparing wordle solution

    Image: The New York Times via Reporter Door

    It ranks these words with that 0-to-99 score in both skill and luck, while also showing you the best word to solve the game quicker. (You can also expand the stats to dive deeper into the math.)

    If you pay attention to what WordleBot is telling you, it could help improve your overall statistics. The New York Times also said you can use it as a “tiebreaker” in your group chats with family — a way to prove who is actually the best Wordle player.

    “We hope the bot’s advice will help you think about Wordle more analytically, which will help you get better at solving the puzzles in the long run,” Josh Katz and Matthew Conlen wrote on The New York Times. “In addition, it may serve as a tiebreaker of sorts for those of you involved in competitive text chains with friends and family. If a Wordle took you five turns but you answered more efficiently than your friends, WordleBot may provide some bragging rights. If you did everything right and were simply unlucky, it will tell you that too. We’ll leave it to you to decide which is more important.”

    If you want to read up on more about how WordleBot works to analyze Wordle, the New York Times has a lengthy explainer.

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  • Google Play Store cracks down on outdated apps

    Google Play Store cracks down on outdated apps

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    Google is preparing to limit the availability of outdated apps on the Play Store, the company has announced. From November 1st, all existing apps in the store should aim to target an API level within two years of the latest major Android OS release. If they don’t, Google says it’ll place limits on which users are able to discover or install them.

    The changes are meant to ensure that software available from the Play Store makes use of Android’s latest privacy and security features. Device owners “expect to realize the full potential of all the privacy and security protections Android has to offer,” Google product management director Krish Vitaldevara writes in a blog post. “Expanding our target level API requirements will protect users from installing older apps that may not have these protections in place.”

    Apps must target an API level within two years of the latest major Android OS release.
    Image: Google

    There are a couple of important caveats to note. First is that the restrictions will only apply when a device is running a version of Android more recent than the app’s API level. So anyone still using an older version of Android OS will still be able to download apps made with their (old) version of Android in mind. Secondly, Google says users will be able to re-download and install any apps they’ve previously downloaded from the Play Store.

    Developers can apply for a six-month extension if their software won’t be ready in time for the November 1st deadline.

    Google already has a similar policy in place for new and updated apps that are submitted to the Play Store for review. Currently an app needs to target an API level from within one year of the last major Android OS release in order to be published. What this new policy does is expand coverage to existing, or possibly abandoned apps on the Play Store, rather than just those still receiving updates.

    In the past, some surprisingly big names continued to target old Android APIs in an apparent attempt to avoid newer and more restrictive privacy and security policies. In 2017, Ars Technica reported that the Facebook app was targeting an API that was two years old at the time, while Snapchat was targeting one that was almost three years out of date.

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  • Dame Helen Mirren loves to play Wordle

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    Dame Helen Mirren is a whiz at Wordle.

    “I’ve just discovered it, I love it,” she enthused at a special screening of her upcoming movie “The Duke” on Tuesday night at The Tribeca Screening Room.

    The Oscar-winning legend divulged that she “quite often” solves the daily word game in three attempts, “but it takes me a long time to get there.”

    Last year, Mirren revealed that she also exercises her brain by taking Italian classes.

    “I’ve been trying to learn Italian … tiny bit by tiny bit, poco poco,” she told The Post.

    The actress, 76, is currently promoting “The Duke,” which also stars Jim Broadbent. It tells the true story of Kempton Bunton, a disabled British pensioner who stole Francisco Goya’s painting Portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery in London in 1961.

    “It is utterly charming,” she told Page Six. “That’s why it is so nice to go out and talk about it because, you know, absolutely hands-down everyone is going to love it.

    Jim Broadbent and Helen Mirren in
    Mirren stars with Jim Broadbent in “The Duke.”
    Pathe

    “It has that quality, it’s just very human, it’s funny but has its core of tragedy in it. It had to have come from real life because you can’t invent this sort of stuff, can you?”

    “So many people are saying it’s the perfect film for this moment in time of people coming out of Covid and that wasn’t calculated but it is true,” the “F9” actress added. “I hate the term feel-good movie because it’s not that but it does make you feel good.”

    Mirren laughingly explained that she hates the overused term because it sounds treacly “and it minimizes what it is because I think it’s much more than that.”

    Also in attendance at the Cinema Society screening were Jennifer Beals, Lorraine Bracco, Padma Lakshmi, Kathleen Turner, and Sony Pictures Classics co-president Michael Barker.

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  • Obi Toppin, Knicks looking to play spoiler vs. Kevin Durant, Nets

    Obi Toppin, Knicks looking to play spoiler vs. Kevin Durant, Nets

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  • Nets ‘hopeful’ Seth Curry will be ready to play vs. Knicks

    Nets ‘hopeful’ Seth Curry will be ready to play vs. Knicks

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