Ni es bueno ni es malo que hayan cambiado la pantalla. Ya comenté que para mi, los contras de la tecnología OLED eran bastante molestos, si bien te terminas acostumbrando. Ahora bien, todo depende de que la nueva pantalla LED sea de buena calidad.
Bueno, si ajusto la cámara para que se vea bien la negra, la blanca parecera un mojón. Es bastante ridículo comparar así unas pantallas. Lo único claro sin haberlas comparado en vivo es que la que lleva OLED siempre va a saturar más los colores.Se ve mucho mejor la blanca.
Los juegos que son íntegramente 3D, como Silent Hill se ven bastante bien a pantalla completa, y si activas el filtrado bilineal, el aspecto suave ayuda a que el reescalado quede bien.
Ahora bien, para un maniático como yo, los juegos 2D o que combinan 3D y 2D como FF9 prefiero jugarlos a la resolución original
Pero así pierdes el 1:1 y ya entra en juego el escalador. Va a gustos, yo prefiero tener un pixel perfect a ver la imagen más grande pero con la imagen reescalada. Tampoco se ve tan pequeña la pantalla.No seria mejor la "normal" en lugar de la original, para con un poco de zoom quitar al menos las bandas superior e inferior?
No, no, con bandas negras a los lados, siempre respetando el formato original. Aunque ya digo que hay quien con tal de llenar la pantalla prefiere verlo todo achatado.Con los juegos en 3D a pantalla completa, te refieres estirando la imagen?
http://www.polygon.com/2014/6/18/5820824/indies-third-party-games-are-vitas-focus-moving-forward"It's very fortunate that the indie boom happened and they are providing lots of great content to Vita," he said. "Gameplay, game mechanic wise, people want to spend 10 minutes, 15 minutes getting in and out. On Vita, it's great with suspended functionality, so these indie games really great for that from a game design standpoint."
"Instead of watching big stories or cinematics, you can spend hours on Vita. So, I think that's actually the biggest star to help provide great content to Vita going forward. And we continue to make games cross-platform games, especially on digital side."
Do you think the Vita then will be getting fewer first-party games, I asked.
"I would say, yes, that's correct," Yoshida said.
The ability to tweak the way a game is controlled on the Vita is becoming increasingly important with the ability to play PlayStation 4 games through Remote Play.
Yoshida said Remote Play has also taken a little bit of pressure off of Sony to make first-party Vita games.
But Sony seems not to be completely capitalizing on the functionality. There hasn't been much of an advertising push about the service, I tell Yoshida. Could there be an official PS4 and Vita bundle coming?
Yoshida said that some European retailers released an unofficial bundle that packaged the two systems together, but nothing from Sony, at least not yet.
"Never say never," he said. "In the past, we did something like Bravia TV and PS3 bundle, so that's even bigger. So never say never."
"We are super excited about how people are using it. We are bringing PS TV with that feature and the tech teams are constantly working to improve the experience as well. It's a Gaiki team who's tech is provided. You are on a streaming service, so the basic tech is the same whether it's PS Now or Remote Play, and latency is super important. So we will continue to provide more utility to Vita as a PS4 companion device as well as PS Now terminal."