If Sony truly cared, why do they treat Vita and its owners like trash?
This article should be removed because it's completely wrong. You can buy them on the Vita store, but you aren't given the option to download them.
"It comes out on PS4, play it via remote-play."
I don't own a PS4, and frankly after the way Sony's treated Vita owners, I'm not sure I want one.
"There's a fan translated patch out for it on PSP (which you can play on VITA via homebrew)."
I'd rather not wait for a vulnerable PSP game to run an exploit on and miss network features.
That's likely? Square Enix's Final Fantasy Steam releases have been iOS ports and updated versions of existing releases.
As in "whY did sony CON the people who bought one?", cause they really could've supported Move better.
They report on anything and everything whether or not it has a snowball's chance in hell of being true.
I wish.
Konami published previous Fairy Tail games.
Idea: More games for Vita that were developed by a team larger than 10 people.
The article states it's for retail sales, so phone games wouldn't count.
Top handheld publisher? I can't recall a single game they released on 3DS or Vita last year.
The Pokemon remakes were a surprise? Are you ignorant to the remake trend that started on GBA?
Hi Cat, I'd love to win!
You really should've went with a clickbait title like "Sony views Remote Play and PlayStation Now support as a replacement for AAA games on Vita".
"there's really something for everyone."
CTRL+F "Vita"
"Vita will get some attention, but not much"
Nah.
Doesn't matter anyways, since I'm pretty sure this is fake. There's few concrete details and frankly too much to announce.
This is fake, a reliable Famitsu leaker confirmed it: http://t.co/RwCFMuXjmO
I'd like to know which RPGMaker games you've been playing, because I've seen 0 that look like Oreshika.
This has pretty much all of the details you could want: http://www.psnstores.com/20...
PS4 is the first, and only PlayStation platform to not launch with a Ridge Racer game. #sosad
It's a perception thing. Not everyone follows TGS or Gamescom, but many look at E3 as the hallmark for the industry. By announcing next to nothing for Vita, while spending more time on a TV show that hasn't left pre-production, it gives the impression that Sony doesn't care about Vita. It tells that casual onlooker not to buy a Vita because it's not even worth Sony's time during the biggest industry trade show.