Elite Online Mag Elite 88 | Page 185

Reggie would later come to own the gaffe though, declaring in 2012 that his “body is always ready” when demonstrating the new Wii Fit U. Well played. 7. Riiiiidge Racer Sony, 2006 In 2013 Nintendo finally bit the bullet and admitted that it had canceled the peripheral, citing that it was “of narrower application than we had originally thought.” 5. Xbox One Reveal - all of it Microsoft, 2013 Kaz can’t even bring himself to look excited about Riiiiidge Racer. Another howler from Sony’s 2006 fiasco, which saw Kaz Hiari doing his best to drum up interest from an indifferent crowd. Turning the focus on the portable PSP, then in its peak, seemed like a smart move, and showing off a new Ridge Racer game seemed like a smart way to do it. But despite Kaz’s increasingly enthusiastic shouts of the game’s title- “it’s Ridge Racer! Riiiiiiidge Racer!” - the crowd could only manage a single ‘whoop’. Kaz also managed to drop the PSP as well. 6. Wii Vitality Sensor Nintendo, 2009 Don Mattrick, who now works for Farmville creators Zynga. Where to begin with Microsoft’s disastrous reveal at E3 2013 of its brand new Xbox One console? Whether fueled by the hubris of success imparted by the Xbox 360 or just in a world of its own, the company dropped bombshell after bombshell when it unveiled the Xbox One. Mandatory Kinect features. TV passthrough. Controllers that still require AA batteries. But most damningly of all, the DRM fiasco. Microsoft envisioned a world in which we no longer owned games, but were merely granted a license to play them, and preowned games would require an activation fee. Oh, and there was the steep asking price of the console itself. 4. James Cameron’s Avatar Ubisoft, 2009 This is as much excitement as Nintendo could muster for the Vitality Sensor. Nintendo threw a curve ball at the E3 crowd when it announced the Wii Vitality Sensor at its E3 2009 Press Conference, telling the audience of a new device that would plug into a Wii remote and could read the user’s pulse and heart rate, for… reasons. For more reasons, Satoru Iwata elected not to demonstrate the device, or even tell the audience what uses he had in mind for it. Cameron forgot the key principal of film directing: Show, don’t tell. Having confidence in your work is admirable, but Ubisoft and James Cameron took this to new extremes at the company’s 2009 Press Conference. www.eliteonlinemag.com 185