I hate it when uninformed people rant (especially when being informed means reading a thread on the same forum).
The "Nunchaku" peripheral comes with the system. Nothing in the word "Peripheral" means "Buy this seperately". Most games will probably use it.
You know what I hate? Stupid people who think they are smart. Now, Androids of the Paranoid persuasion may have endless hours of a wasted life to spend in a fantasy world, but I do not. My time has value. I have far too many commitments with actual people to pour over every word said in a 101 page topic such as this, or one which is whatever ridiculous length the Wii topic has reached, in hopes of finding some nugget of actual information. And if you happen to have that much free time on your hands, I won't pick on you for it. And in all honesty, I'm completely open to being informed about that which I am apparently uninformed, an attitude you tend to find in mature people. But if you're going act high and mighty for not having a life, in an to make yourself look better to help your apparent lack of self esteem, then you're doing yourself a disservice, not me.
Oh, and by the way, what exactly does the word 'peripheral' mean, then?
Disclaimer: The previous paragraph is not to intended pick on the many patrons of this forum who posses near-encyclopedic knowledge of video game, trivia, development information, mechanics, ect. and
don't try to lord it over others like arrogant hypocrites.
Nintendo explained the exact controlls for TP on Wii at the E3 press conference. And most games do require the nunchuck, which I'm pretty sure will be bundled as standard with all wiimotes.
You do not swing the sword with the wiimote or the nunchuck. The B trigger is the sword. The closest you get to swinging stuff is the fact that shaking the nunchuck controller will do Link's spin attack with the sword.
Fdv, thank you for the info. More to the point, thank you for not being a jerk about the info. However...
Shigeru Miyamoto disclosed to Japan's Nintendo Dream publication that instead of pushing the B button on the Wiimote for a sword swing in Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess, the player will now control that movement with the motion of his or her arm. IGN says during E3 that Nintendo said players would get tired having to actually swing the controller, but now Miyamoto has changed his tune: "Upon actually playing it, it's more interesting this way."
...I was infering based on this post (assuming that the information it contains is reliable), that the control scheme was being altered, possibly/probably beyond the extent to which it wasreported. As far as the nunchuck being included, I wasn't aware that that had been confirmed by Nintendo and was under the impression that it's inclusion as a free peripheral (a concept I had believed Nintendo to be unfamiliar with) was speculation.
In any case, in rereading my post, I realized I cut a large section out, elaborating on what I meant to communicate. In retrospect, there were some important things which served to clarify my stance on the issue. The short version is that I wasn't implying that Nintendo couldn't fit everything on the Wii remote (although I am still unclear on how they are handling such things as the shield and lock on button), but rather that cramming all of the functions into a device with significantly less buttons in such a way that it functions
well could prove extremely difficult, and Nintendo has yet to convince me that they've done it. And that's the point. For the presence of dual games to be justifiable, Nintendo needs to show people that there's something better/extra about the Wii version. I haven't seen that. I wasn't at E3, though. But hey, niether was most of the rest of the world, and Nintendo doesn't need new customers, do they?
On the topics of Hyrule size and transportation, I think Epona is a big factor to consider. I mean, if it takes 45 minutes on a horse to cross Hyrule, what does that make on foot? Too much walking, I'd say. Unless there are a heckuvalot of warp points. Guess we'll find out.
In any case, think I've met my quota of pissing people off for the day, so I will retire into the eternal bliss which is an intigration paper. Have a good night, all.
Andy