Digital Home Advisor
Newsletter Subscription
At E3 Tuesday, Nintendo gave a real-time demo of long-rumored title Wii Music, which will feature gesture-controlled instruments and the new Wii MotionPlus attachment.
Nintendo icon Shigeru Miyamoto told the audience that Nintendo designed Wii Music to allow everyone to experience the joy of performing music.
When players play a saxophone, for example, they hold the controller as they would a real sax. Same for drums, which will use the Wii Balance Board as the kit pedals.
While most music games today require you to press buttons with precise timing to match symbols on screen, Wii Music relies on the gestures and placement of the Wiimote to create songs.
There will be 50 different instruments in all, including drums, piano, guitar, violin and saxophone, all of which you play using the same positions and gestures as the real thing. There was no timing, as in Guitar Hero or Rock Band, as the gestures, button presses, and timing of the player's movements were controlling the action.
The software won't grade your performances, Miyamoto said, but it will record them and allow you to create music videos with up to four people.
Good Gear Guide Member Login

Jobs for: Cisco | Linux | Oracle | HelpDesk | LAMP | PHP | Ruby | Web Developer Resources: Legal Work Rights | Pay Rise Calculator | Salary Survey
Tandberg Data lifts RDX® QuikStor™ capacity to 500GB and offers continuous data protection 2008-10-16 09:23:00+10
m.Net Chosen to Build Fox Sports Mobile Site 2008-10-15 09:51:00+10
Carbonite Release 3.7 Features Enhancements Suggested by Carbonite User Base 2008-10-15 09:49:00+10
Fujitsu PC targets Today's Young Adults with the release of the L series 2008-10-14 12:40:00+10
Sound Alliance Group expands with acquisition of Mess+Noise 2008-10-14 08:48:00+10











