Question Block Lamp Won’t Grant You a Single Extra Life [Lighting]

I'm not entirely sure how Etsy hasn't already been done-in by copyright lawyers, but I'm glad they're still around. Because where else are you going to find awesome unlicensed stuff like this Super Mario question block lamp? More »
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The Future of PC gaming: It’s called Project Fiona

Posted in: ces-2012,Gaming,gizmodo,Project Fiona,Razer |

Courtesy of Gizmodo

By Matt Buchanan
Gizmodo

Just stop me when this sounds ridiculous: A tablet. Built for gaming. Like, really built for gaming. With twin analog joysticks. That are permanently built into it. That's Razer's Project Fiona. And it's more amazing than you think.

Project Fiona is a proof-of-concept and a prototype in the most serious way. What you're looking at is version 0.2. (Razer's already finished work on five more iterations of Fiona — they're up to version 0.8 at their labs, and expecting to hit 1.0 by the end of the year.)

I can tell when I feel the heat coming out of the vents, as the fan spins up to cool the Intel Core i7 breathing fire inside. Or when the right analog stick feels a little sticky.

Courtesy of Gizmodo

(For more pictures, go to Gizmodo's post.)

But when I run my finger along the edges of the brushed aluminum frame that provides Fiona's remarkably rigid structural integrity, or try to make its skeleton flex and creak, it feels more done, more solid than some other very finished tablets I've used. "And frankly, the final product will look much different," says Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan of Fiona.

Which is also why I can't tell you battery life, or how much it'll cost, though Tan is aiming for under $1,000 for the Windows 8-powered tablet — meaning it'll have full PC powers, though Razer is adding some software of their own on the gaming side, like the interface for browsing games. (Side note: Do you remember OQO, a little company that built little computers that were both radically ahead and behind their time? Appropriately, a lot of their engineers worked on this.)

It's lighter than you'd think, for a tablet that's at least as thick as three iPad 2s — it'll be thinner, promises Tan — and has a pair of sticks bolted onto it. But I rest my elbows on my knees to play Warhammer 40K: Space Marine. And it feels totally natural. If you've ever used an Xbox 360 or PS3 controller, you know how to use Fiona's controls; Razer software takes care of the mapping PC controls to the buttons.

Courtesy of Gizmodo

Do you know what the minimum spec requirements are for Space Marine? A 2GHz dual-core CPU, 2GB RAM, 256MB video card. And it ran beautifully on Fiona's glossy 10.1-inch, 1280x800 display. I held PC gaming in my hands, and I killed a bunch of Orcs and it felt fantastic. It sounds stupid that a 10.1-inch screen could be as immersive as a 24-inch display, but when you're able to bring your game up to your face, and it moves with you and your body, it's a different kind of connection.

Speaking of moving! It's got an accelerometer and force feedback and a camera, so Razer's already thinking of ways PC games could take advantage of gamers having access to traditional controls, touch and movement simultaneously.

The deepest PC gamers might balk at an analog stick and a handful of buttons truly replicating the PC gaming experience on the go — and I agree an RTS seems pretty hard to squeeze into those controls — but the potential of ubiquitous, for-real PC gaming anywhere, as defined by the games, is pretty incredible to consider even for the most hardened of PC gamers.

And even if Fiona is not for them, they should still be thrilled to salty, Cheeto-infused tears that this thing (and the Blade) exists. It pushes the boundaries of what PC gaming is. And Razer might just be the only company willing to reinvigorate PC gaming — the exact kind of PC gaming that gamers love, not Zynga Facebook games — by radically reinventing it at a hardware level.

So while Project Fiona itself might not literally be the future of PC gaming, I still feel like that's exactly what I just held in my hands.

More from Gizmodo:

At CES Razer showed off their concept PC gaming tablet called Project Fiona. In-Game's Todd Kenreck reports.

 

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Origin’s Insane New Gaming Laptops Are as Fast as They Are Pretty [Gaming]

Posted in: Ces,ces-2012,Gaming,Origin,Overclock |
Origin's been one of the craziest overclocking outfits around for a while now, but its laptops haven't been really, let's say, aesthetically pleasing. Its latest rigs got the Ricky Lake makeover treatment, though, but not at the cost of raw asskicking power: they still clock in at a ridiculous 4.5GHz. More »
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I Just Held the Future of PC Gaming in My Hands and It’s Called Project Fiona [Video]

Posted in: Ces,ces-2012,Fiona,Gaming,Pc Gaming,PCs,Razer,Razer fiona,showcase,Top |
Just stop me when this sounds ridiculous: A tablet. Built for gaming. Like, really built for gaming. With twin analog joysticks. That are permanently built into it. That's Razer's Project Fiona. And it's more amazing than you think. More »
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Turning Your iPhone into a PSP Is Pretty Awesome [Gaming]

Posted in: Ces,ces-2012,Gaming,icade,Icade mobile |
iPhone gaming's great and all, but it's still hard to get over the on-screen touch controls when the screen's only 3.5 inches. Ion's new iCade Mobile lets you basically jam your phone into the body of a PSP and play without cluttering your screen with your own damn fingers. More »
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