Archives: q


PS3’S LUMINES SUPERNOVA TO INCLUDE LITTLEBIGPLANET SKIN


littlebigsupernova.jpg

12.5.2008

Brandon Boyer

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Japan’s game news service Dengeki Online is reporting that Lumines Supernova, the first version of Q Entertainment’s music/puzzle game for the PlayStation 3, will be getting its own LittleBigPlanet skin (that is, music track and accompanying background art). Q hasn’t mentioned which song will make the cut, but we’re hopeful it’s Go! Team’s “Get It Together,” the deliriously cheerful recorder-laden tune.

A number of sites are dubiously reporting that the Lumines game would be playable from inside LittleBigPlanet itself, we’re fairly confident this is not the case. No date has been set yet on Supernova — Dengeki says the game will be available “this winter.”

Lumines Supernova collaborates with LittleBigPlanet [Dengeki, Google translation]

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A HOLIDAY DEAL ON SOUND AND VISION


rezhd.jpg

11.26.2008

Brandon Boyer

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Here are two reasons I like Microsoft’s Black Friday Xbox Live Arcade specials: one is that they’ve lowered the price on Q Entertainment’s HD remake of Dreamcast/PS2 rhythm/shooter Rez, which means there is essentially no excuse not to experience the game if you haven’t before. Inspired by, the story goes, one of his first rave experiences (this would have been the very late 90’s, mind), Sega designer Tetsuya Mizuguchi set out to create a game that could blend that light and sound and palpable pulsing rhythm as fantastically. The result was Rez, and a long series of music/puzzle games since.

The second is that it gives me an excuse to post this recent YouTube Live Genki Rockets video Q CEO Shuji Utsumi pointed to earlier today. As mentioned in the last Q-related post, Genki Rockets is Q’s music property fronted by teen pop star Lumi, the first baby born in outer space who beams her j-pop disco to Earth from 30 years in the future.

Even if the style of music isn’t your cup of euro-beats, there’s kind of nothing not amazing about the performance, from the faceless DJ-naut on the ones and twos, to Lumi’s eventual appearance on the monolithic low-res LED screen, fingers sending off glittering trails as she does her interstellar dance: all precisely the kind of synaesthetic experience that inspired Mizuguchi to create Rez in the first place.

The rest of Microsoft’s sales are at Major Nelson’s website.

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