If you go hunting for new 3DS games you donât have to worry about running out of bullets. This is one scarce safari.
A couple of weeks ago, after I noticed that the Nintendo 3DS had sold just 143,000 units in June, the month when its two big problems were fixed, my colleague in Japan noticed an even more alarming phenomenon: 3DS games disappearing before they were even born
https://lastchance.cc/whats-with-all-the-cancelled-3ds-games-5822519%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
The EA showcase was in a large ballroom room. We could call it a vast plain full of grazing water buffalo and antelope if we wanted me to painfully stretch my metaphor or vaguely offend the game developers and reporters in attendance. Letâs not do that. But you should be picturing a big room with lots of game demos set up in it, some running on TVs on a stage, some on TVs near couches, some near rows of tables at the perimeter. Dozens of video games!
Looking around the room, I couldnât spot any 3DS games. I went sniffing at the Need for Speed area. Theyâll have a 3DS version, a developer playing the PS3 version of the game told me. It just wasnât there. Itâll be structured as a 26-episode version of this fallâs cross-America Need for Speed: The Run. It will even support AutoLog, the Facebook-style notifications system introduced in last yearâs console game, Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit, that pushed updates to players when their friends beat their scores in one of the gameâs races and let them challenge their friends back. The 3DS would also pull challenges from nearby 3DS owners using the systemsâ Street Pass function, I was told. But the game wasnât being shown in New York.
EAâs biggest game of the fall doesnât seem to be coming to 3DS. Make of that what you will.
At least the Need for Speed people had a 3DS game to talk about (no DS or PSP versions, by the way). The NHL guy said there wonât be a 3DS version of his game. The Battlefield 3 people had no 3DS game either, not to show or discuss. None was announced, they said which, well, EAâs biggest game of the fall doesnât seem to be coming to 3DS. Make of that what you will.
The Madden folks said they were making a new PSP Madden for later this summer, but the launch-day Madden that was released last March was it for 3DS American football for the year. They were showing the next NBA Jam running on the Xbox 360. Again, no 3DS version to speak of.
The Sims Medieval guy said his series is spinning off onto the iPhone and iPad. Nada for 3DS.
(Nowâs as good a spot as anywhere to mention that, generally I believe the âno 3DS versionâ answers I was getting meant was being made; but video game people do get oddly cagey about whatâs announced vs. what isnât announced, often favoring promotional reality over reality reality. Thatâs an ember of hope for you, 3DS fans.)
One of the Sims 3 Pets people I found was very proud of the console version of the game, itself a cousin of the PC game (i.e. the one with the franchiseâs most-demanded feature: horses). He did indeed have a 3DS version to discuss, though I mean âhaveâ in the sense of there being one somewhere in a development studio that he was able to describe to me. In The Sims 3 Pets for 3DS, players will be able to puppeteer the lives of domesticated animals without having to worry, as you do in the console and PC versions, about also steering the lives of Sim people. Youâll be able to buy items in the game through Nintendo Play Coins, which are racked up as you walk around with the 3DS; and you can Street Pass gifts with your friends.
This EA event was a lovefestâor a zoo, if you want to go back to the safari thingâof 3DS games compared to other gaming publishersâ showcases lately. I went to a THQ event. They had at least a dozen games, not one of them there on the 3DS. I went to a Ubisoft showcase where they had Assassinâs Creed, Rayman, some other games, free drinks and no 3DS games. Capcom had the already-released Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D at theirs. Nintendo, of course, had the new Super Mario, the new Mario Kart, the re-made Star Fox and Kid Icarus at theirs, as if the 3DS was gamingâs main event. (Majesco will have a batch at theirs, including the new Cooking Mama and Jaws.)
Wait. I hadnât just found a 3DS game but a guy who was boastful about it?
Iâve been going to these big game publisher showcases in New York several times a year for a half-decade. Itâs not as if handheld gaming has ever gotten enough respect or support from the game companies to have a big presence at them. But if youâre stepping into all of these Holidays-in-the-Summer press events in 2011 expecting to gauge the game publishersâ enthusiasm for the 3DS you see about as many signs of it as you do their enthusiasm for broccoli (at least broccoli sometimes shows up in the free food spread!)
Amid the jungle of 3DS disappointment at EA, I did find one 3DS game, a quite stunning 3DS game, in fact. Itâs a soccer game. FIFA 12 for 3DS, to be specific. Not really my thing, but I am always up for a video game surprise, though, and letâs say that FIFA 12 3DS is actually impressive. Can I judge a FIFA game well? No. But there I was looking at this game when the line producer on it told me that it is the biggest portable game EA Sports has ever made. Not their biggest 3DS game, but bigger than any DS, PSP or iOS game. More than 500 players, more than 50 leagues, and more than 50 tournaments.
âThis is not some lightweight game,â the producer, a guy named Matt Prior, told me. Wait. I hadnât just found a 3DS game but a guy who was boastful about it? He had me try the gameâs full 11v11 mode and let me admire the player animations and started rattling off details about the gameâs career mode, training mode, its 50-plus leagues including English Premier League and Major League Soccer (no Womenâs World Cup, though; no Hope Solo.) He was telling me about the club-owning mode that lets you control the teamâs finances and the Be a Pro mode too. He changed camera angles for me and let me see a down-the-field view that made the 3D graphics in the 3DS punch deeply through the screen.
I tried some optional touch-screen activated shooting that Prior said let the designers achieve something never possible in the gameâs console versionsâgiving the player the feeling of actually trying to place their shot as they had their footballer kick it (player stats will affect if the spot you touch on a lower-screen three-dimensional rendering of the goal is where the ball actually goes). They wonât support online gaming, but will support local wireless. Plus theyâll do a day-one update of the game for updating roster transfers and kits (translation: trades and uniforms) when the game launches in the fall. Another update will be pushed through, via 3DS Spot Pass, in January.
Just when I was about to tell Prior he was woefully out of sync with the apparent 3DS disinterest around him, he pulled a Wait-Thereâs-More and loaded the gameâs âstreetâ mode, a 5v5 mode that had its own custom levels and a curvature to the terrain, Animal Crossing-style to further emphasize the systemâs 3D effects.
I do believe I had found my lion. My 3DS safari was a success.
Whatâs with the lack of 3DS games at all these showcases? I think itâs fair to say that the 3DS is not in the position the DS earned. Itâs not a phenomenon. Itâs, at best, a contender. Maybe itâs similar to how the PlayStation 3 was after the white-hot PlayStation 2. Or maybe itâs the DS pre-Nintendogs and Brain Age. All I know for sure is that new 3DS games, impressive ones or not, are hard to find these days. I also know there were many iOS games at that EA event. But as I search, maybe Iâll find more FIFAs. Iâll keep hunting.
For some equal-opportunity skepticism about the PlayStation Vita, click here