Friday 17 February 2012

Catherine Unboxed

I had a lovely surprise waiting for me when I returned home from a hard day of graft today. As I walked through the door my peepers fell upon a gloriously large box emblazoned with the corporate logo of Amazon.co.uk. This could only mean one thing, Catherine had arrived.




Okay, so I admit to being slightly disappointed with the lack of soundtrack. Honestly I have no clue why I thought there would be one, other than perhaps seeing the coasters and making the assumption that they were actually the game disc and therefore the OST too. No matter, as you can see from the video the special edition of Catherine is a nicely packaged piece of kit with a super large T-shirt, Poster, Coasters and Pizza box style container to keep it all in. The box art is superb and as for the game... Well I'll let you know when I have the chance to play it.

In the mean time, you know when I said on last weeks show that I wouldn't be getting a PS Vita any time soon...

Saturday 11 February 2012

Amazon orders for Catherine hit with 7 day delay

 I should be writing this after having been up all night playing my newly acquired copy of Catherine: Stray Sheep Edition, but as you sharp eyed readers will have gathered from the title of this entry i'm not. Instead I'm rather more bright eyed and bushy tailed and writing about the delays which have hit the Japanese puzzle/dating sim game. According to Amazon, as well as a source at Game (if you can call a local branch manager a source) there have been problems at the suppliers end which has delayed delivery of the Game to UK suppliers


Amazon.co.uk yesterday sent out emails apologising for the delay saying "Our supplier has notified us that there is a delay obtaining stock", the aforementioned source at game confirmed this when i enquired about Catherine the same day saying "we haven't got any Catherine stock at all, it's a problem at the suppliers end".

If this is as a result of the biting cold weather that has battered the UK and mainland Europe for the past week then it is, i would venture to say, just about an acceptable delay. However if, as others have theorised, it is because the game is still not localised properly for EU release, then it's absolutely unacceptable that we were told this late that the game was going to be delayed. Certainly, it would make more sense that it's a delay at the manufacturing stage since Amazon claim that their supplier has yet to obtain their stock, but it's strange that this should affect the UK release since the US has had an English language version of the game since July 26th 2011. I hasten to add that it hasn't been confirmed, as yet, what the reason for the delay actually is.

Amazon has already reached out to its customers in a second email, with February 17th now the revised release date.

As soon as any more news regarding these delays surfaces, we'll have it right here. And keep checking back for the first ever Game For A Laugh/KillerKeyboard.com Video Blog where I'll be doing an unboxing of Catherine: Stray Sheep Edition.

EDIT: It would appear that some GAME stores do in fact have copies of Catherine on the shelves, although the one that i've managed to contact directly only had one in stock and no special editions at all. It seems that the supply chain issue primarily affects Amazon.co.uk while other retailers have, at least, a limited supply of the game. This certainly doesn't help anyone who pre ordered it on Amazon though.

Wednesday 8 February 2012

Why games can't vanish from the high street

On episode 24 of the Killer Keyboard podcast Nick and i talked about the financial difficulties that GAME currently find themselves in. The reports, which detail plans to close as many as 60 shop fronts by 2013, make for depressing reading for employees and gamers alike. 

Since May of 2007, when Gamestation was purchased by GAME for approximately £74 million, there has been no other dedicated games retailer in the UK, nowhere else where you can get the same dedicated advice and assistance. Shops such as HMV and WH Smith, along with Supermarket chains like Sainsbury's and Tesco all sell video games, but unlike GAME they don't have dedicated staff with knowledge specific to the field, and certainly don't have the floorspace to stock the same variety of software.

Without a dedicated Video Games retailer out there on the street we would see a massive reduction in the one thing that is the life blood of Video games. Choice.

If there was no GAME on the high street would we even see new and interesting games like Catherine or the niche Ace Combat series on the shelves? or would the big supermarkets and retailers stock the things they knew would sell? There would be a whole shelf full of CoD and FIFA, while lesser games would be buried on the bottom shelf, unseen and unloved.

Go into your local supermarket and you'll see exactly what I'm talking about. With little room to spare you'll see every PS3 or Xbox game they have to offer on a rack that measures, at best, 6ft x 10ft. You won't see Catherine, you won't see Ace Combat, but you'll see a shed load of games that the managers think will sell the best. You can't blame them for doing it, but it would kill smaller game developers if these were the only places you could buy your games.

While i applaud HMV's efforts in the expansion of their games business, both in range and the addition of a pre-owned section, their financial position is even worse than GAME's is purported to be. The only other retailer that could possibly do justice to games may be about to vanish down the plug hole.

You could, of course buy your games online through a website such as Play or Amazon, but some of my fondest memories of games growing up come from seeing a random game on the shelf and buying it on a whim. Loaded and its sequel Re-loaded were two games that i had for the original Playstation, but I only played them because i had seen the first game sitting on a shelf in GAME. If I'd seen it on a list of games on Amazon, i would very likely have skimmed straight past it. Would I have played the hilarious and completely addictive Football game " All-Star Soccer" if I hadn't have picked it up in GAME? probably not, since it was neither FIFA or ISS (Pro Evolution Soccer's predecessor) very few played it, but it had a charm that made me want to play it, and i never regretted buying it.
 
Sure, it wasn't "sexy football" but it was fun

Then of course there's downloadable titles. True, it looks as though the days of the physical game disc are numbered, certainly as the dominant delivery system, but it would be a shame for physical copies of games to disappear completely. Even if downloadable titles were cheaper, as they appear to be looking at Japan's Vita game sales on the PSN, a great number of gamers, myself among them, resist this trend and would always prefer to own the disc than have a downloadable version of the game. You don't get the same "just opened" smell from an online game manual...

No, if GAME were to cease to exist, gaming would be a worse experience for it. Limited Choice, reduced interaction with the product and the loss of a tradition are what we face if they can't turn it around. I just hope that they can.