Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Farpoint and the PlayStation VR Aim Controller Are Game-Changers



All three of the high-profile consumer PlayStation VR Controller platforms support motion controllers, but only one of them now has an official accessory designed specifically for first-person gameplay and shooters. This is where Sony’s big budget sci-fi shooter for PlayStation 4, Farpoint, comes into play, launching today in bundles and alongside the PlayStation VR Aim Controller.

Farpoint is the first PlayStation 4 game that uses the Aim Controller and it was built around it as the showcase experience. And what a showpiece it is! Playing through all of Farpoint using the PlayStation VR Aim Controller, we can say that it’s the deepest and most satisfying sensory experience ever in a first person shooter. It’s a game-changer for VR and a must-play for any PS VRowner looking for that new killer app.

In Farpoint, players see themselves stranded on an alien world after a cosmic anomaly goes haywire, trying to locate other survivors and uncover the mystery of what really happened. And of course, on that journey there are all sorts of aliens to blast away in the most immersive console shooter made to date.


Farpoint offers a full story campaign and supports two-player co-op online with a friend (so long as they have an account with PlayStation Plus) and requires the PlayStation VR system. It does not require the Aim Controller but you’d really be missing out without it.

Note the lack of the word “gun” in that peripheral’s title, despite the device’s basic weapon shape. That’s likely as intentional as the simplistic design itself which is made to function effectively as any in-game weapon while at the same time not resembling an actual real-life weapon “so that anybody, from children to adults, feel comfortable playing with it,” says Taichi Nokuo, a designer working out of Sony PlayStation’s Tokyo offices.

The Aim Controller tracking in VR is incredibly accurate and we had no issues with lag or calibration. As intended, it worked well with all of the weapon types encountered while playing through Farpoint‘s campaign. The device finally delivers on what the Move controllers and gun attachments never could do in the PlayStation 3 era. More impressively however, and why we love Farpoint so much is how it addresses one of VR’s most prominent challenges: movement. Not once did I get a feeling of nausea while playing Farpoint, something that’s not uncommon in other movement-based games. I couldn’t play PS VR’s RIGS: Mechanized Combat League Game due to it as an example.

Friday, April 14, 2017

7 Ways to Turn Team Conflict Into Healthy Discussion



The best startup teams don’t shy away from some healthy friction and heated debates between team members or founders. That’s the way smart people with innovative insights make real change happen. Yet we all know that there is a fine line here, beyond which heated debates generate so much emotion and drama that the entire team becomes dysfunctional.

The obvious challenge is to channel these interactions in a way that maximizes their value to the startup as positive results, without letting them slip into a non-productive or even toxic mode. An equally important challenge is to maintain a culture that rewards engagement, since many people are uncomfortable challenging the views of others.

For feedback of any type to be effective, there can be no quick judgment of right or wrong. Yet it certainly is possible for team members to not deliver feedback well, or for the receiver to accept it poorly or even ignore it. Either of these problems turns conflict into unhealthy friction, which can be avoided with the following initiatives:

8 Lessons Improv Comedy Class Taught Me About Entrepreneurship



Picture yourself in a group setting, maybe at a party or business function. You chime-in to the conversation with a line so funny, so perfect, so well-timed that the group erupts with laughter; maybe someone even slaps your arm in approval or sheds a tear laughing (when you’re really lucky). And you stand there and soak in your verbal victory. Then you replay it in your head a few times before you go to bed, and relish your moment of brilliant comedy.

I love those moments. So much so that I decided to become skilled at them: I signed up for improv comedy classes.

But what I got out of these classes was much more than a couple of one-liners for parties. Improv turned out to be great for my company and personal well-being. Here are those eight business lessons improv taught me:

How to Find Your Next Big Business Idea



You have been thinking about this for a long time, and now you are ready to get serious about starting your own business. Many people know they want to strike out on their own before they have a solid idea. There are so many different directions you could go, so many ideas out there. How do you know what is the right one for you?

Sure, some entrepreneurs have inspired “eureka!” moments that give them that big idea, but even more follow a method of generating successful ideas. Rather than waiting for the lightning bolt to strike, there are some tried and true strategies for arriving on your best bets for a business.

Here are some of the things you can do to help set yourself up for the win when planning your new venture: