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PS Vita, We Hardly Knew Ya!


On 07/11/2016 at 01:42 AM by Cary Woodham

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For the longest time, I didn’t own Sony’s newest handheld, the PS Vita.  Which may seem strange at first, because I loved the PSP, Sony prior handheld.  In fact, other than the Neo Geo Pocket Color, the PSP was the only other handheld I bought that wasn’t made by Nintendo!  There were lots of PSP games I loved to play: Loco Roco and its sequel, Ys Seven, Half-Minute Hero, Gurumin, Mega Man Powered Up, and many more.  But the Vita just didn’t have as many games that I wanted to play, or at least not enough to warrant purchasing one.  But after a few years they’ve built up enough games that interest me, and since I couldn’t think of anything to ask my family to get me for Christmas, I just threw a Vita on my list and to my surprise I got one late last year as a present!  So here’s my impressions on the Vita and some games I got for it (probably a little too late, but hey, better later than never).

It’s kind of sad that the Vita bombed, because it seems like a pretty decent follow-up to the PSP.  The touch screens on the front and back work great, and I love the big, bright screen.  That’s one cool thing the PSP had over the DS and 3DS was its bright screen, and what I think helped it separate itself from Nintendo’s handheld juggernaut.  And the Vita is very inviting.  They even included some mini-games to help you get used to the system, in the form of the in-game Welcome Park (which also has trophies).  I also think it’s neat how you can see your Vita trophies on the PS3.  Yeah, I know, I’m easily amused.  And ever since I’ve gotten my Vita, I’ve been able to review a good number of games on it, at least five.  That’s pretty good for a system I’ve only had for about six months.  Because of that, in a way I kind of wish I had gotten a Vita earlier!

But like I said, for the longest time there just wasn’t enough games I wanted to play on the Vita.  And for a while it was pretty pricey as a handheld.  Plus, the memory cards you have to use for it are Sony’s brand, and they can be pretty expensive, too.  And the cards were not included with the Vita so you had to buy them separately.  That may be why the Vita ultimately bombed, but I’m not 100 percent sure.  But the Vita isn’t totally dead yet.  Many smaller indie and niche game companies are still making games for the system, which is probably how I’ve been able to review some Vita games still.  Most of the ones I’ve reviewed weren’t worth keeping, but the last two I’ve played were pretty decent.  I recently reviewed Grand Kingdom, which is a strategy action-RPG that turned out better than what I thought it would.  And Adventures of Mana (review up soon) is a nifty little remake of the old Game Boy Final Fantasy Adventure game.

But when I got my Vita, there were five physical copy games I wanted to get.  Luckily since they were older titles, I didn’t have to spend more than 20 bucks for any of them.  I guess that’s one advantage of not being an early adopter of a game system.  Rather than have the games be on those weird UMD discs like the PSP had, Vita games come on a little cartridge.  It’s like half the size of a 3DS card, and you can fit several up your nose (I don’t recommend doing that, by the way).  So here are some quick impressions of the five games I got for my Vita.

Touch My Katamari

I love the games in the Katamari Damacy series, and I hated missing out on this one for the longest time since I didn’t have a Vita at launch.  For those who don’t know, in the Katamari games you play as a tiny alien rolling around a sticky ball, and objects will latch to it and like a snowball, it gets bigger and bigger.  So at the beginning of a stage you may be rolling up bits of trash on the ground, but by the end, you may be rolling up cars and buildings and even continents and planets!  The definition of a quirky, Japanese game.  They added a new feature in this one: using the bottom touch screen, you can stretch and squish your Katamari ball so it can fit through narrower spaces or cover more ground.

But unfortunately, I’d have to say that this game is the worst in the series.  Even more so than the PSP version.  Environments are so barren, the music isn’t as memorable (Katamari games are known for their songs), and I hate how they did extra levels.  There are levels you can download as DLC, and they’re free, which is cool.  But in order to get them, you must roll up special items in the stages, and they are very hard to get.  I beat the whole game and only got two, and the extra stages cost ten to play.  It’s a shame, too, because one of the extra stages was filled with nothing but Namco game references in a Pac-Man maze, which I always wanted to see in a Katamari game. 

Super Monkey Ball: Banana Splitz

I also really like the Monkey Ball games, where you roll around a monkey in a hamster ball trying to navigate mazes without falling off.  Kind of like a 3-D Marble Madness.  This one is just more of the same, although you can design your own levels, but I never tried that part.  Monkey Ball games also include a selection of mini-games, and I even wrote about the Vita ones in a previous blog.  Some are good and some are not so good.  Still a decent game, but not good enough to get a whole Vita for.  I think the last truly good Monkey Ball games were the ones on GameCube.

Gravity Rush

This was one of those games that everyone said was a Vita ‘system seller’ and I had to try it.  So I did!  You play as a young woman who can manipulate gravity, and she uses her powers to fight monsters in a Steampunk world full of floating cities.  You mostly use your gravity powers to fly around, so it’s like you’re Superman (or Superwoman in this case).  While it is a creative game, it does have some problems and I didn’t like it as much as I thought I would.  The storyline is garbage and has a lot of loose ends that they didn’t tie up.  Which isn’t important to me, but what is important is that flying around can be very disorienting, and I even got a little nauseated a couple of times while playing, which rarely happens to me.  I think they could’ve solved this problem by making the game more colorful, as it uses a lot of muted tones.  A lock-on mechanism while attacking in the air would’ve helped, too.  But other than that, the game was fine.  The main character in the game, Kat, is especially cool (and kinda cute, for a video game character anyway).  I think she was a DLC character in the Sony All-Stars Battle Royale game, too.  Gravity Rush is still a good game, but there are others I liked better.  But I certainly liked Gravity Rush more than the first two games I mentioned on this list!

Ys: Memories of Celceta

Ys Seven was one of my favorite games on the PSP.  So I was excited to learn that a new Ys game that played similarly was coming out to the Vita.  Unfortunately, I didn’t like it as much as Ys Seven, but I still played it all the way through so I must’ve still enjoyed it enough.  Ys Seven just had slightly better gameplay and level design and characters and story and music.  One thing I didn’t know until recently is that the Vita game is just a remake/reimaging of the fourth game in the Ys series.  It would be interesting to go back and see the original and see how much has changed.  And in case you don’t know about Ys games, they are similar to Zelda titles, but focus more on action rather than puzzles.

Tearaway

Out of all the games I have on my Vita, I think Tearaway is my favorite.  It’s a 3-D platformer that hearkens back to the ones found on the PSOne and PS2, so that was welcome.  The world you play in is made out of paper.  You may be thinking, “Oh, like Paper Mario.”  No, even BETTER than Paper Mario.  And that’s saying a lot, since Paper Mario does that aesthetic very well.  In the game you play as an envelope with arms and legs (you can even pick its gender).  Your job as an envelope is to get a message to you, the player.  Yup, the characters in the game even call you a “You.”  And the game uses all the Vita’s capabilities to try and bring you into the game.

For instance, in nearly every scene in the game, they use the Vita’s camera to have a picture of you peeking in through a hole in the ground or the sun in the sky.  You can also use the camera to take pictures to use as textures for papercrafts in the game, and you can use the tilt functions to take snapshots in the levels as well.  Sometimes you can use the bottom touch screen to ‘poke’ holes in the paper to help the envelope defeat enemies or solve puzzles.  They even show your finger pushing though, which is why they ask your skin color at the beginning of the game!  You can also use the stylus and touch screen to cut out and glue pieces of paper to decorate your envelope character or other objects in the world.  My favorite was when they asked to you design snowflakes for the ice level, I made a Pac-Man shape, so all the snowflakes were little yellow bits of Pac confetti!  The neatest idea was when you take a picture of a colorless object in the game, it’ll gain colors and you can go to a special web site and log in and get instructions to print out and make a real life papercraft based on that object!  The level of user creativity in this game is astounding, but it makes sense when you realize this game was made by the same folks who did LittleBigPlanet.  Tearaway doesn’t have as much customization as LittleBigPlanet titles do, but it does still have a lot and it’s OK because Tearaway is just trying to be its own game.

Tearaway does have a few problems, though.  Like with other 3-D platformers, sometimes camera angles and play control can be a little problematic.  Others may complain about a lack of challenge, since you start where you left off right after you die, and get unlimited lives.  But these little snags didn’t ruin my fun with the game.  It was full of creativity and had such an inspiring ending.  If you have a Vita, THIS is the game I recommend getting the most.  Especially for kids. I’ll end this section with a link to YouTube video with my favorite song from Tearaway.


Conclusions

And that’s my impressions on the Vita!  I tell you one thing, the Vita certainly has helped me make another decision.  If I were in the market for a new console right now, either the PS4 or Xbox One, I know which one I would get: the PS4.  Don’t get me wrong.  I have nothing against Microsoft and I loved my Xbox 360.  But there are only 3 games on the Xbox One I’d be interested in playing right now.  One is Rare Replay, which is just a bunch of old games.  Another is Cuphead, a 2-D action game where the graphics look like a 1930’s cartoon.  But I hear it’s really hard and I think I’d be just as happy watching someone else play it.  So that just leaves Ori and the Blind Forest.  Which I hear is really good but I’m not going to buy a whole console just for one game.

But because of my time with the Vita, I already know three games on the PS4 I’d want to play.  Gravity Rush has a remastered version on the PS4, as well as a sequel.  Not to mention a new remake/reimagining of Tearaway, which I bet looks even more amazing on the PS4.  And that’s not including some of the other PS4 games I’ve been eyeing, like Dragon Quest Heroes and the new Kingdom Hearts game that may or may not come out in the next two or three years!  I’m not really in the market for a new console right now, but who knows, maybe I’ll ask for a PS4 for Christmas this year!

So I’d like to conclude this Vita blog with a call for help.  In the comments section, if you know of any other Vita games that I may like, please let me know!  And tell me your favorite Vita games, too.  Thanks, and later!  --Cary


 

Comments

KnightDriver

07/11/2016 at 01:52 AM

I got the Vita for Muramasa Rebirth and Dragon's Crown (action RPGs). I really like the system but I haven't had a lot of time to play it with all the other stuff out there. I need a job with a commute so I can find the time. Um. . . I played Grim Fandango Remastered on it and got stuck, as usual with me and point-and-click adventure games. Most recently I started Persona 4 Golden (JRPG) and really liked it, but other things got in the way. I like the way the Vita seemlessly connects to your PSN account. It also plays over the net really well. I played some Silent Hill Book of Memories (isometric action game) co-op with Daftman here on Pixlbit a ways back and it worked perfectly. What I don't like is the crazy prices for the proprietary memory cards for the system. I will not buy one at those prices. I played some Tearaway and liked it, but, yes, the camera is sometimes an issue in that game. 

Cary Woodham

07/11/2016 at 08:56 AM

Vanillaware games are great.  But I already have Muramasa on the Wii and Dragon's Crown on the PS3, so I probably won't get the Vita versions.  I didn't know that Grim Fandango Remastered was on the Vita.  Might have to check that one out someday.

KnightDriver

07/13/2016 at 03:27 PM

I think Day of the Tentacle is also on VIta, but I'm not sure. I need to go play that.

Cary Woodham

07/13/2016 at 06:16 PM

That's another one I may have to try someday, I guess.  I never really thought about playing a point and click adventure on a handheld.  But I guess it might work pretty well with a touch screen!

KnightDriver

07/14/2016 at 01:19 AM

Grim Fandango was fine on Vita but my eyes are getting worse with age and now it's hard to see small text. I got stuck in that game because I missed something tiny on the in-game computer screen. I like just about everything better on a nice size TV. 

Cary Woodham

07/14/2016 at 03:47 AM

Yeah I've noticed with a lot of handheld ports, they don't bother to change the font size so the text is way too small.  In the past couple of months, I've started wearing reading glasses when playing handheld games.  But yeah if I have a choice, I'll try and play it on a big screen.

VisuaLIES

07/11/2016 at 02:36 PM

I just charged my Vita again after going more than a year (maybe 2!) without playing it.  I thought about selling it more than a couple of times, but I never pulled the trigger.  It started out very promising and I was really impressed with it when it launched, but it never became popular.  People can point to the expensive memory sticks and the rise in mobile gaming, and while those are certainly valid reasons that the Vita never took off, the main culprit is lack of support/AAA software.  Sony definitely tried during the early days, but you have to understand, the Vita isn't like mobile, where one person can create a game, throw it on the app store, and if he/she's lucky, make a fortune.  Sony wanted the console experience on the go with Vita, but that meant that developers would have to devote a lot of time and money to make a game, and the early sales didn't warrant that.  Publishers didn't want to take the risk of creating a game in hopes that it became a system seller, and people didn't want to buy a system with no games.  So it failed.  Fortunately, it does well enough in Japan (where developers create lots of games that appeal to that market--go figure), that it still gets a lot of really great Japanese-developed software, so for gamers who love RPGs, visual novels, and the like, it's great.  Sony also at least made sure that indy publishers were able to port their PS4 games over to Vita, so there are plenty of those too.

I charged my Vita intending to play Axiom Verge on it, only to find out that it doesn't support cross saves with PS4 :(.  I did download a bunch of games that I got on sale during the many PSN Store flash sales, along with some PS Plus games I added to my download list but never downloaded, and have had fun playing those.  It really is a nice piece of hardware.  Of the games I have, you might like Hot Shots Golf, Katamari, and Little Big Planet.  Those were all good versions of established IPs.

Cary Woodham

07/11/2016 at 04:37 PM

I have the Katamari game, but I don't have Hot Shots Golf or LBP.  I have a game on PSP that's like Hot Shots Golf though, called Pangya.

Speaking of Japanese games, do you know if the Vita is region free?  I think I heard that a Taiko no Tatsujin game was released for the Vita in Japan a few months ago...

VisuaLIES

07/12/2016 at 12:20 AM

It is, but you can only have one account on the system, so you'd need a Japanese PSN account for digital games/dlc, etc.  Physical games should work.

Cary Woodham

07/12/2016 at 04:30 AM

Good to know, thanks.  Yeah if I were going to import anything it would be a physical copy.  I'll double check and make sure it'll work if I consider importing anything.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

07/11/2016 at 03:25 PM

I love my Vita.  I play it a lot.  Both for PSONE games and PSP games, but the occasional Vita game and remote play on PS4.  

You know, I was the complete opposite for Tearaway. I couldn't stand it.  It was just too cute for me at the time and I just turned it off and never played it again. :(

Cary Woodham

07/11/2016 at 04:42 PM

Too cute?  TOO CUTE?!?  A game can never be too cute!  Man you'd probably hate to come over to my house to play games.  Nothing but Kirby and Yoshi and Servebots and LEGOs and Animal Crossings.  I'm not sure you could take all that without running away screaming. :)

Matt Snee Staff Writer

07/11/2016 at 07:09 PM

See, I usually like cute, but I guess that night I played Tearaway I just wasn't having it! :)

Cary Woodham

07/11/2016 at 11:15 PM

Man I just can't get enough cute stuff.  I'm supposed to be a tough manly man, but I have a weakness for cute things.

Casey Curran Staff Writer

07/11/2016 at 04:03 PM

I thought the Vita was an amazing piece of hardware but I saw it flopping the second I looked at Uncharted GA's graphics. I couldn't imagine any 3rd party dev pushing the tech for a tiny console with how expensive it would be. Tearaway was definitely my favorite game on it too, just makes me smile. Now it's become an indie machine for me though, but even less so since I got into PC gaming.

Speaking of which Cuphead and Ori are on PC and shouldn't be too hard to run on there. Know you're not a PC gamer but the option is there.

Cary Woodham

07/11/2016 at 04:43 PM

I know most games can be played on PC now, too, but right now I just don't have the time for PC gaming, believe it or not.

But hooray for liking Tearaway!

Casey Curran Staff Writer

07/12/2016 at 02:19 AM

Based on what you wrote Cuphead sounds like a game you'd enjoy a Let's Play of more anyways while Ori is fun but not that good. PS4 is the way to go for you.

Cary Woodham

07/12/2016 at 04:33 AM

Ori and the Blind Forest isn't that good?  Really?  Most people I've talked to love it.

Yeah if I had to choose right now, I'd pick the PS4 over Xbox One.  But I probably won't get either anytime soon because I'm not in the market for a new console right now.  But who knows?  Tomorrow Microsoft may announce that Capcom is making Mega Man Legends 3 on the Xbox One, and then I'll have a dilemma. :)

BretBaber

07/16/2016 at 10:26 AM

I have a 3DS and a Vita, and if I had to pick one to play forever it would be the Vita.  It's just a shame that it doesn't get much love from Sony anymore.  Not sure if you're a PS+ subscriber, but you should look into subscribing because you'll get at least 2 free games every month, plus they do a lot of really good deals as well.  I just picked up the Tales of Hearts game for $5.99 last week, which is a great price.  

There's some games you haven't mentioned that I think you'd like based on the games you talked about above.

Tales From Space - Mutant Blobs Attack.  It was a digital launch game I believe, and it was definitely one of the best games to get early on.  It's made by Drinkbox Studios, and I'll be listing some of their other games here as well.  The reason I think you might like it is because it's a platformer kind of similar to Loco Roco.  Charming from beginning to end.

Severed - Another Drinkbox Studios game.  It's a first person dungeon crawler, where you you use the touch screen to swipe and sever enemy parts that you use to upgrade your character.  Came out a few months ago, and was one of the best games I played in an already fantastic video game year.

Guacamelee - The second Drinkbox made game.  It's a Metroid style game that has a visual style I find similar to Samurai Jack.  You can get this on the 360 or PS3 as well. I know soon Drinkbox is coming out with a Drinkbox Collection soon for the Vita, so if you're interested (which you really should be, their games are great), that might be the cheapest way to get all of the games.

LittleBigPlanet - Some of the touch features make this game more enjoyable than the PS3/4 versions.  I had fun from beginning to end.

Final Fantasy X/X-2 HD remaster - You seem to like RPG's, so I'm sure you've played this.  Playing this on the Vita at work/school/toilet is awesome!

Killzone, Uncharted, Hot Shots Golf, Freedom Wars, Persona, and not to mention a vast collection of old PSP and PS1 games make the Vita an awesome system to own.  I bought it for $250 when it released and I'm still happy with my decision, I just wish they'd make more games for the thing.

Cary Woodham

07/17/2016 at 07:00 AM

It's pretty hard for me to imagine anyone liking the Vita more than the 3DS.  I sure do like my 3DS.

You know, I have half a mind to think that you're a sales rep for Drinkbox Studios.  :)  Ha ha, just joking!  I've actually already played AND reviewed both Tales From Space: Mutant Blobs Attack, and Guacamelee.  But on the 360.  They're really great games, but I probably won't buy them again for the Vita.  I skipped out on Severed because using the touch screen to slash limbs off of critters just didn't appeal to me.

I do like RPGs, but I'm pretty selective about them.  I'm an old fart, so anything past FF9 I'm generally not interested in (and I didn't even like FF7 and 8).

I sure do appreciate you taking the time to give me suggestions, though! :)

jgusw

07/17/2016 at 08:22 AM

I bought a Vita at the beginning of the year and I own a lot of digital games for it now.  The only game I play is Persona 4 Golden.  I playing through it for the 3rd time.  

I bought my PS4 a little over a year ago.  It's a great console.  

The only game I want to play on the Xbox One is Cuphead.  I don't have much interest in anything else.  

Cary Woodham

07/17/2016 at 08:53 PM

Looks like you and I got a Vita about the same time!

SanAndreas

07/17/2016 at 11:33 AM

I got Tales of Hearts R and Persona 4 Golden when I finally decided to spring for a Vita TV (they were only 80 bucks at the time). The big thing on it for me, though, are Falcom titles like Ys and Trails of Cold Steel. I also like running PSP and PS1 games on the thing, so I can actually play Valkyria Chronicles II and Lunar: Silver Star Harmony on my big TV screen. :)

Cary Woodham

07/17/2016 at 08:54 PM

I've been eyeing those PS TV things.  They're pretty cheap now.

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