2011年2月11日星期五

Using a single transmitter with a six-foot radius range

Using a single transmitter with a six-foot radius range, Sixense TrueMotion can detect the position and gesture movement of controllers without a line-of-sight limitation. As long as the controllers are within the 12 foot diameter spherical magnetic field, it can detect their movement in space along six axes;a Sixense rep proved this by controlling a second tech demo with one hand behind his back.It takes some getting used to the TrueMotion replica Rolex 16618B Men's Watch control scheme, using a large Wii Remote-like controller in each hand, each with its own analog stick, trigger and face buttons. It's not how I'd normally survive the zombie apocalypse, but seeing a lower latency;about 40 milliseconds in the dev kit version playable at CES, expected to improve with some of Razer's own tech;

one-to-one motion controlled sword spilling zombie guts on screen is still neat.The control set up that Sixense had implemented at Razer's CES booth used the left-handed TrueMotion controller for much of what the left hand side of a keyboard or controller would do. Angling the controller downward crouched, a flick upward performed a jump, a replica Rolex 16613CDD Men's Watch push forward shoved. It was also used to toss grenades. A flick of the controller left or right cycled through weapons, and after choosing the grenade, an overhand toss motion tossed that equipped item, in my case Boomer Bile.The right hand controller controlled firing, camera control and melee weapon swings.

It was a bit awkward at first, particularly for camera control and aiming, as Left 4 Dead 2 wasn't built with something like Sixense control in mind. But Valve has clearly been impressed by the technology, vowing support for TrueMotion controllers in replica Rolex 16613-BLSO Men's Watchx games using its Source engine. Regardless of the learning curve, the motion control felt spot on, quick slices with the controller resulting in accurate slices on screen.Sixense had an alternate Metroid Prime-like control scheme implemented, one that let the player control the camera by pushing the reticule against the edge of the screen.