Microsoft hopes "Titanfall" can boost Xbox One
Tech titan Microsoft -- which has struggled to keep
pace with Sony and its PlayStation 4 -- is pinning its hopes on a new action
video game, ironically named "Titanfall."
A sneak peek of the new "Titanfall" on Xbox One at the Microsoft Lounge on February 24, 2014 in
The highly anticipated game for the new generation Xbox
One console lands this week in a major global release, with Microsoft is
betting it will keep the company in the forefront of the battle for the
living room and home entertainment.
"The challenge is finding the 'killer game,'"
says Avi Greengart of research firm Current Analysis.
"Titanfall appears to be the first must-have,
first-person mutliplayer game that takes real advantage of the Xbox One's
additional horsepower."
Technology analyst Rob Enderle at Enderle Group said
the new game -- featuring elite assault pilots and heavily-armored, 24-foot
(six-metre) titans -- will be a critical test for Microsoft.
"Titanfall is really the big title for Xbox
One," he said. "Game consoles live and die on blockbusters, so it
is really important that the audience likes this game."
The game is produced by Respawn Entertainment, using
designers of the "Call of Duty" blockbuster series, and distributed
by Electronic Arts exclusively for Microsoft's Xbox and PC platforms. It
carries a
Set in the near future on a distant war-torn part of
space called "the frontier," "Titanfall" drops players in
the middle of a conflict between the Interstellar Manufacturing Corporation
and the Frontier Militia.
The main characters are the titans, described as
"descendants of present-day fledgling military exoskeletons," and
the pilots, who have varying degrees of certification.
Players can shift back and forth between pilot and
titan, change tactics on the fly and attack or escape depending on the
situation, according to the producers.
The release comes with Microsoft's Xbox One in intense
battle with Sony and Nintendo's Wii U to be at the heart of digital home
entertainment and consoles under pressure to prove their worth as people
increasingly turn to smartphones or tablets for games and videos.
Microsoft and Sony both had strong holiday sales after
the release of their new-generation consoles last year. But so far in 2014
PS4 has been leading, according to the research firm NPD.
Greengart said Microsoft is trying to show Xbox One has
momentum, and "Titanfall" may help.
"It's not available on Sony, so this gives
Microsoft a much-needed shot in the arm just as Sony has announced a nice
spike in sales after PS4 went on sale in Japan," Greengart told AFP.
Microsoft doesn't want to be seen as left behind, he
explained. "If consumers think one platform that has legs, sometimes it
becomes so. Right now it looks like Sony has pulled ahead."
"Titanfall" is being released Tuesday in the
Even with challenges facing the console games sector,
there have been notable recent successes including "Grand Theft Auto
V," "Battlefield 4" "Just Dance 2014" and the latest
installment of the "Call of Duty" franchise.
"Despite the growth of mobile games, a tremendous
number of consumers are willing to spend serious money on the hardware and
the gaming experience," Greengart said.
"But is this the last generation of consoles?
That's the big question."
Greengart said Microsoft and others have failed so far
to bring gaming into the "ecosystem" that will encourage consumers
to use the full range of products including phones and tablets.
"Neither Microsoft nor Sony nor Nintendo have done
a good job of bridging the living room with their mobile assets," he
said.
AFP
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Thứ Hai, 10 tháng 3, 2014
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