Multiple Entertainment Devices on WiFi

Buffalo Ethernet Converter

If you found yourself in the same situation I was in recently, in which you have multiple internet-ready entertainment devices in your living room, I’d heartily recommend another recent purchase, the Buffalo Ethernet Converter.

This device will allow you to connect up to four ethernet-based devices, such as Xboxes, PS3s and Series 2 Tivos, to a single device which then connects to your wireless network. Purchasing a single wireless adapter for multiple devices is the cheapest route, especially when you can find the Buffalo Ethernet Converter for $69.99, while single-device products, such as the official Microsoft 360 run around $99.

The device works with all major wireless routers, regardless of brand, making this the easiest way to connect your living room to your wifi network at the lowest cost possible.

The HDTV Upgrade Domino Effect

I admit it, I pretty much had to be dragged kicking and screaming into the brave new world of high definition television. I was happy with my 19″ SDTV, and frankly all the information the average consumer has to absorb to make even the most basic informed decisions was a little off-putting.

Last week, however, I decided to celebrate my birthday by upgrading to a larger television. After looking through my choices, I finally broke down and settled on one of the less expensive 32″ LCD HDTVs.

I like the television, while not as feature filled as others it does what it does well for the price. The problem is that this one purchase has placed me at the start of a chain of related purchases because of the upgraded technology.

HDTVs, for example, can actually make regular broadcast video look worse than SDTVs by their very nature of displaying a higher video definition. Any compression artifacts from digital broadcasts that are smoothed out due to the lower definition of an SDTV become crystal clear on the HDTV.

So that means I’m looking at an HD receiver to replace the regular one from DirecTV. Of course, it also means that I also need a HD DVR to record HD televion, such as the HD Tivo or DirecTV HD DVR. The former is still expensive, while the latter is on severe backorder.

And of course, now that I have an HDTV, any excuses not to get an XBox 360 due to not being able to see the performance difference on an SDTV have melted away.

When will the upgrades end?!

“Wii Would Like to Play”

The first Nintendo Wii commercials are now hitting the US airwaves and they are amazingly good pieces of marketing for the new video game console.

The “Wii would like to play” tag works really well, turning a name that most gamers have raised a skeptical eyebrow over into a catchy slogan that promotes the social gaming aspect of the system. Even the inclusion of the two japanese gentlemen is a great little play on the ii’s in the name.

With such a really strong marketing message, combined with the lowest price tag of any of the new game console, as well as hardware that isn’t going to make you feel the need to spend more money on an expensive HDTV, the Wii has made even a staunch Nintendo skeptic as myself interested in the system.

Classic Deluxe Transformers

Starscream Classic Deluxe

Hasbro has recently released a new series of the 80s Transformer toys called the “Classic Deluxe” series. The above photo is of the popular character Starscream that I recently purchased.

The figures, priced at under $10, are excellent, with a much higher production quality, vastly improved arm and leg articulation and a design that looks far closer to the animated cartoon that we grew up with during the 80s.

If you still get a little nostalgic for transforming robots, take a look at this reasonably priced figures the next time you happen across a toy section.

Just Cause Just Another Game

Just Cause

I’ve just finished an hour and a half of playing Just Cause, released at the end of last month by Avalanche Studios and Eidos Interactive.

Although I’m not very far along in the game, it’s become clear that the game wishes to combine elements of the Grand Theft Auto series, Mercenaries and Total Overdose. Unfortunately, this combination doesn’t quite reach the levels of those three games in their what they do best.

The game world of Just Cause tries for the open-ended exploration of Grand Theft Auto San Andreas with it’s 250,000 acres of tropical island nation. However, much of this area is undeveloped jungle, with a smattering of small villages and towns dotting the landscape. There’s also far less to actually do in the populated areas, other than assassination of enemy leaders and blowing up objectives.

There is plenty of combat to be had in Just Cause, but it has far less impact than that found in Lucas Art’s Mercenaries. Gunfire from your enemies does little to your health, health packs are plentiful and weapon choices are far more limited and generic in this game. While the AI in Mercenaries wasn’t perfect by any means, you’re far more likely to watch a stream of civilians run straight into obvious gunfire in Just Cause, while the enemy AI is annoyingly tenacious and over precise in their knowledge of your location.

Just Cause also attempts to implement a stunt system, with 32 “stunts” your character can perform. However most of these involve jumping on top of cars or out of airplanes to hold onto their wings one-handed. Total Overdose was a very limited game with sub par graphics, but it had a wonderfully over-the-top stunt system that fit the game world very well.

The graphics in this game are very good, even great once you consider the size of the islands and the lack of load times as you drive or fly around the land. In many ways, the game has the look and feel of Far Cry with it’s tropical green backdrops.

Unfortunately, the game suffers greatly in the physics department. Vehicle controls are passable, but far from GTA level, especially with the lack of gamepad controls for PC players. It’s easy to clip through many trees without incident even when flying a few feet off the ground in a helicopter. And most larger, mobile objects lack a sense of weight. Vehicles fly hundreds of feet through the air when they hit an obstacle and if your character moves against a large piece of concrete rubble, it rolls across the ground as if it was a ball.

Overall, I’d personally rate Just Cause as mindless fun, good for someone looking more for a simple free-form destructive romp through the country-side. There’s not much depth here, however, compared to most of the other games it borrows from, so consider that when you look to rent or buy.