No camera could capture the amount of glee spilling out of me as I drove through the Willamette streets, a cacophony of violent sound and bloody fury that
left the screen shaking.
Not exact matches
I can almost smell it:) The only thing that i don't really like is the ad of a woman
shaking her everything on the
left side of the
screen.
The arena has no walls, so flying off
screen one way brings you back on
screen another, but the developers try to
shake things up by curving the physical space, so flying off in the upper
left brings you back in the lower
left.
On touch devices, like the iPad, you tap the lower quadrants of the
screen for flippers, and your
left / right nudge control can either be done by tapping the upper quadrants or by
shaking the device itself, which is a neat idea that doesn't work particularly well.
But it's the added extras that really sell the experience: When the acorn
leaves your TV, the world is covered in a retro TV filter that places scan lines across the
screen and gives everything a slight green tint, give the controller a
shake, and you'll hear the tiny seed rattling around via the controller's tiny speaker.
I am going to
leave the Motorola experience until a review but suffice to say it includes always on voice; always on
screen; easy access quality cameras — in two
shakes; turbo power options; and more.
The control sidebar to the
left includes controls for switching device orientation from portrait to landscape and vice versa and simulating
screen shaking.