Hi, Right. The same applies to the WWE wrestling games for Play Station and XBox. Certainly there is a fair amount of things you have to remember like menus, remember what button performs what buttons you need to pull off a certain wrestling move, but otherwise pretty playable. If you have the commentary turned on in the WWE games you get a good idea what happened or didn't happen in a lot of cases. For hard core WWE blind fans it can be done, but you have to practice at the games to make them accessible because you can't just scroll through a menu and have it tell you that you've selected John Cena, Randy Orton, CM Punk, whatever because they aren't accessible in that way. However, if you braille up a list of the menus and refer to it when going through the menus to setup a match then no problem. Just count down so many clicks to find the option you want and select it. Once you get into the match itself its similar to the fighting games where you listen to what the opponent is trying to do, and block it followed up with a suplex, slam, or some other counter move.
Cheers! On 1/6/12, Clement Chou <chou.clem...@gmail.com> wrote: > Just depends on the genre you want to explore. Though I will admit that > fighting games are basically the only genre which is 100% fully masterable > as long as you master the nuances behind them, which is partly why I find > them so great. But music-based games like guitar hero and rock band are also > part of the fully playable category. Part of what is going to turn vi gamers > off of these though is that in music games and fighting games alike, the > game isn't built to be accessible... which means you actually have to work > to learn them. Not saying everyone applies, but there are a lot of vi gamers > I know who would, say, not even take a glance at street fighter IV because > you don't have a game which holds your hand. The same applies to music-based > games.. you actually have to learn the songs, just as you have to learn > sounds in fighting games. The game doesn't describe every aspect and nuance > of the game to you. --- Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org. You can make changes or update your subscription via the web, at http://mail.audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org. All messages are archived and can be searched and read at http://www.mail-archive.com/gamers@audyssey.org. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the management of the list, please send E-mail to gamers-ow...@audyssey.org.