PS Vita Wants to Keep You Busy Between Games

Mike Kayatta

Minister of Secrets
Aug 2, 2011
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PS Vita Wants to Keep You Busy Between Games



Vita's launch apps might give you a reason to put down your smart phone.

Sony's PlayStation Vita will have a lot to compete with when it comes out early next year. With smart phones and tablets on the rise, any new handheld gaming console is going to have to offer more than an HD screen and a slot for cartridges to succeed. For those interested in the Vita, the good news is that it seems like Sony's on track to do just that with its recently announced line-up of bundled apps, available pre-installed on any new device.

If you take a look at the picture in the upper-right of this post you can see what the homescreen of the Vita is going to look like. Going top to bottom, left to right, here's a quick breakdown of what you'll be able to play around with right out of the package.

Welcome Park: A tutorial of the Vita's features, experienced by the player through mini games.

Party: This is Sony's new cross-game chat system, a heavily desired feature for PS3 that will only be made available on the Vita. [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/112491-Sony-Cross-Game-Chat-Never-Coming-to-PS3]

Playstation Store: A hub for downloading games, apps, and DLC.

Group Messaging: A networking app that lets you share text messages, chats, and images.

Photos: The place to take and view photos taken with the device's on-board camera.

Near: A new service described by Sony as "an exclusive location based gaming network" that allows you to "find new people based on where you are, challenge them to games or play cooperatively and enjoy a completely unique gaming experience on PS Vita," as well as "send and receive new levels, unlocks and in-game items."

Trophies: A collection of all trophies you've earned in game, also viewable by friends.

Music: Vita's .mp3 player.

Friends: A list of all your game-playing comrades. This app also allows you to track your friend's recently played games, see their earned trophies, or join their games on the fly.

Internet Browser: Vita's standard portal to the web.

With the release of this list, it finally seems like we can start to get a real sense of how Sony expects us to use its new hardware. Aside from gaming, the handheld looks like its going to offer a decent balance of social networking, music, and Internet without getting bogged down by trying to be the next iPhone, something with which many other handheld devices on the market seem all too preoccupied. The PS Vita [http://www.amazon.com/PlayStation-Vita-WiFi/dp/B003O6EATE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1317660610&sr=8-1] hits Japan late this year on December 17th, but the rest of us are going to have to wait until "early 2012" before we can try it for ourselves.

Source: PlayStation EU Blog [http://blog.eu.playstation.com/2011/10/03/playstation-vita-box-designs-and-launch-apps/]



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mjc0961

YOU'RE a pie chart.
Nov 30, 2009
3,847
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I guess it's a good thing that Vita isn't in the same market as smartphones and tablets, otherwise it would have something to worry about. All it really has to worry about is the 3DS.
 

KeyMaster45

Gone Gonzo
Jun 16, 2008
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Those are some nice bells and whistles, but I can say right now I might only ever use one or two of them. Call me old fashioned but I prefer the functions of my handheld to focus on playing games, maybe store a bit of music so I have one less device to drag with me on road trips.

So yeah, at this point I'd probably not buy it because I know I'd never get my money's worth out of it.
 
Dec 14, 2009
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I don't smegging care about apps.

I just a want a handheld with a good library of games and a battery life that isn't on par with the Sega Game Gear.
 

ckam

Make America Great For Who?
Oct 8, 2008
1,618
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The Vita's going to have to take more than that to convince me of its true quality. Until then, I'll be skeptical.
 

weirdee

Swamp Weather Balloon Gas
Apr 11, 2011
2,634
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With the exception of the ingame chat, there's no difference between their apps and the 3ds, save for a few tweaks here and there acknowledging Nintendo's terrible networking support.
 

Smooth Operator

New member
Oct 5, 2010
8,162
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So they do the same thing as smart phones, why would you switch then...
Ah who am I kidding people will buy anything new even if it's made of pigshit.
 

himemiya1650

New member
Jan 16, 2010
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Basically its a PSP that can IM other people on PS3 and that if you go out and other people happen to go out, you can stay in and coop/multi with them. Sounds like the best reason in the world to buy one.
 

gigastar

Insert one-liner here.
Sep 13, 2010
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Thats fine and all, but what i want is to see Monster Hunter Freedom 3 as a launch day release then i would seriously camp outside the shops to get it.
 

theonecookie

New member
Apr 14, 2009
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Mr.K. said:
So they do the same thing as smart phones, why would you switch then...
Ah who am I kidding people will buy anything new even if it's made of pigshit.
You know people may what a gaming device ever thought about that one as it stands the first gen psp is a better gaming device than a iphone or other smart phones hell even the original DS is

Anyway I'm optimistic about this lets hope we see some good launch games unlike the 3ds
 

Owen Robertson

New member
Jul 26, 2011
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Meh. I'm not all that excited unless they announce San Andreas Stories. CJ BEFORE he goes to Liberty City? Dirty.
 

Shadow-Phoenix

New member
Mar 22, 2010
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None of what was listed up there has gotten me to want to consider buying a Vita since most of those features where on the first gen PSP so nothing exactly groundbreaking or new apart from the slight touchscreen which does not merit to me.
 

Mr. Omega

ANTI-LIFE JUSTIFIES MY HATE!
Jul 1, 2010
3,902
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The biggest thing I see that hasn't been done on either the first PSP or a smartphone is cross-game chat. And while I do like it, it's still annoying that the actual console this thing is a portable version of still isn't getting it. But that's beside the point. It's a good feature.

Still, there are a few questions they haven't answered that I, and many others, would like to know. The biggest two for me being battery life and price of games.

Also:

Near: A new service described by Sony as "an exclusive location based gaming network" that allows you to "find new people based on where you are, challenge them to games or play cooperatively and enjoy a completely unique gaming experience on PS Vita," as well as "send and receive new levels, unlocks and in-game items."
This is Spot Pass.
But I'm expecting praise and excitement for this, and nobody to make the connection.
 

Baresark

New member
Dec 19, 2010
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This is a complete bunk list. Most of these are dumb. The only thing that is going to make this worth while is the game lineup, and we don't have any idea about that really, won't know till it's almost here. Sony: Making useless handheld devices since 2004.
 

Rad Party God

Party like it's 2010!
Feb 23, 2010
3,560
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It looks quite interesting indeed. Although, I still don't expect it to outdo a smartphone, I still expect it to deliver quality gaming on the go.

I'd also like to see what they're planning to do with the PS2 downloadable games, if they plan to include the Vita...
 

Jkudo

New member
Aug 17, 2010
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Mr. Omega said:
Also:

Near: A new service described by Sony as "an exclusive location based gaming network" that allows you to "find new people based on where you are, challenge them to games or play cooperatively and enjoy a completely unique gaming experience on PS Vita," as well as "send and receive new levels, unlocks and in-game items."
This is Spot Pass.
But I'm expecting praise and excitement for this, and nobody to make the connection.
I heard they are actually different. You'll have to look it up though but supposedly they have some differences.

Apps that are not included on the list you have to download from the ps store i think. You have to download skype, twitter, facebook, etc.