hands on:
http://gizmodo.com/5025659/wii-motio...lancholy-bliss
"When playing the Frisbee minigame, the Wiimote essentially acts as the Frisbee. The slightest turn of the wrist is represented instantly on screen by one's avatar. That's neat...but how 1:1 was this really? I moved the Wiimote in odd positions, wrapping my arm around my body and over my head. And it captured every gesture. Any time I was able to fool the program—a trick that took some effort—it could probably just be blamed on lack of proper model animations, not the hardware itself.
The thrill I got from just watching my avatar hold the Frisbee like I did was greater than...maybe any experience I've had on the Wii aside from Super Mario Galaxy.
Sword fighting was much the same. Where the Wiimote alone has incredible difficulty registering something like a forward thrust, the MotionPlus Wiimote recognized the move with ease. And like a bad Conan impression, I swung the Wiimote with all my might to destroy Jason Chen. It was great, even though I lost."
http://gizmodo.com/5025659/wii-motio...lancholy-bliss
"When playing the Frisbee minigame, the Wiimote essentially acts as the Frisbee. The slightest turn of the wrist is represented instantly on screen by one's avatar. That's neat...but how 1:1 was this really? I moved the Wiimote in odd positions, wrapping my arm around my body and over my head. And it captured every gesture. Any time I was able to fool the program—a trick that took some effort—it could probably just be blamed on lack of proper model animations, not the hardware itself.
The thrill I got from just watching my avatar hold the Frisbee like I did was greater than...maybe any experience I've had on the Wii aside from Super Mario Galaxy.
Sword fighting was much the same. Where the Wiimote alone has incredible difficulty registering something like a forward thrust, the MotionPlus Wiimote recognized the move with ease. And like a bad Conan impression, I swung the Wiimote with all my might to destroy Jason Chen. It was great, even though I lost."