October 12, 2007 |
Assassin's Creed developers claim both PS3 and Xbox 360 are problematicBy Dave Parrack
Desilets, the game's creative director, told Pro G that Ubisoft Montreal is struggling with memory problems on both consoles. It seems that neither the PS3 or the Xbox 360 are much of a joy to develop for, and the company is facing
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What makes you think they do now? All of the systems have internet browsers, and the 360 and PS3 also allow you to play movies. Hell, you can download movies and tv shows on the 360, and use it as a media center. The PS3 allows you to install Linux on it, and that opens up all kinds of capabilities.
Especially with the PS3 and Xbox 360 we're seeing a trend toward consoles that are literally standardized PCs in special boxes, and as such the divide between consoles and PCs is becoming smaller and smaller.
Actually, the PS3 and 360 both use PPC chips (and for that matter, so does the Wii), where as consumer PCs use x86 processors. Also, the PS3's CPU, Cell, has a radically different architecture than anything consumer CPUs use. I do agree that we're getting much closer to such an event (the Xbox 1 was probably closer than anything in this generation though) but we haven't gotten there yet.
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