







Rock Band for the Nintendo Wii arrives in about two weeks and Harmonix was kind enough to send us a drum and guitar set to play with. To our surprise, we found a few hardware improvements.

Yeah, it's white. Really, really white. What kind of rocker uses a white drum set?
The most obvious improvement is seen with the pedal. As you can see below, the new pedal features a stronger spring. While they didn't send the game (booo hiss), the new spring adds a quicker response and it doesn't feel like your foot is still attached to the pedal as you drum.

There was also improvements to the construction of the pedal itself. It's a lot more sturdy and it feels like it has a bit more meat to it. Still, you're going to have to put something behind it to keep it steady while you play Enter Sandman on Expert.

The drum heads also sounded a bit quieter, but that might be attributed to the fact that we haven't worn them down with the game yet. I detected less of an echo effect coming from the Wii drum heads, but they're still a little too loud in general. Where are my drum covers Harmonix?!

And for the first time, the Rock Band guitars are wireless! While Harmonix didn't change the look or feel of the guitar, there are few new additions, specifically with the back.

Besides a fancy new Rock Band sticker, the guitar's power switch has been placed next to the battery cover. It's set deep in the guitar body, so you'll have no fear strumming along while you're standing. While we could see where some dude hooks the button on his big belt buckle during a sweet solo, most players will have nothing to fear.

What's that? You don't own a Wii or Rock Band yet? Don't worry. All of the newer revisions from the Wii set have been added to the newer models for the PS3 and 360.
Check out the gallery below for a more close-ups.

The mouse has always been the de facto standard pointing device for PC-based first-person shooter games. Zalman, best known for its PC cooling accessories, hopes to end that dominance with its FG1000 FPSGUN mouse.
Looking like an upside down blaster off the set of Stargate SG-1, Zalman's design is unique and oddly long with a mouse-like sensor at one and and a lighted scroll wheel with gun grip at the other. The idea is simple; the sensor is at the far end, as the pistol is at the other end, giving players a wider range of motion with less movement (moving the angle of the hand is faster than moving your arm). Zalman says that it doubles the 20mm degrees of aim to 40mm degrees, which sounds good but may take some getting used to.
Offering sensor tracking from
As we've been preaching for some time, the Wii has a much lower attach rate than other consoles (that's the magic number of games-per-console consumers buy). We often tried to explain to one of our Nintendo-loving colleagues that even tough the Wii has sold more systems than other consoles, it wasn't as big a moneymaker for Nintendo as one might think, because the real profit comes from $50-60 games, not a low-profit-margin box of hardware that sells for close to what it cost to make.
Now the New York Times is confirming our suspicions, pointing out today that, "The average Wii owner buys only 3.7 games a year, compared with 4.7 for Xbox 360 owners and 4.6 for PlayStation 3 owners." The Times goes on to say that Super Smash Brothers Brawl sold more than 1.4 million copies its first week, but, "sales dropped more than 90 percent over the first four weeks.
It'll take a lot more than that to sink the super-popular Wii -- but take a survey of your Wii-owning friends who aren't typical gamers and see if they regularly buy new games, or if they're just happy to play Wii Sports over and over again -- the answer may surprise you.
For a match made in hack heaven, coffee connoisseurs can give their home-brewed shots of espresso an extra bit of precision and care courtesy this Wii nunchuck hack. Adjust your machine's brew, steam and timer settings all with the flick of a thumb. But the most gratifying part? Getting your bad boy brewing immediately with a quick pull of the Wii nuncuck's Z-button trigger.

There were a number of casualties suffered when the Nintendo Wii first arrived. Arthritic hands proved inadequate for Wii Bowling, or in the bloodiest cases, Wii Baseball. Toddlers and their grandparents spent the first few months of the Wii's life randomly tossing Wii nunchucks around the living room, until they traded up to The Strap.
There was another problem, though. It may not have injured our flesh, but it prevented us from being the gamers we can be. I'm talking about the Wii cord, of course. The ol' Ball and Chain. In the history of video games, has there ever been a device so close to perfection that its one flaw felt like a personal insult? How could Nintendo revolutionize the way we play modern video games and then tie us down with a jump rope for hobbits? It seemed unfair and that's because it was. Past tense.
Now we have an option -- clocking in at twenty bucks to boot. The Nyko Cord-Free may have one of the dullest names in recent memory, but it single-handedly (pun intended) changes the way you'll play your favorite Wii games.
It's simple to set up. Pop in the nunchuck, wrap the ball and chain around the base, plug it into the small adapter, turn it on and Wii-la, you're wireless (last bad pun, I promise). I'd gotten used to holding back when playing Wii Boxing. The cord would force me to pull my punches, and that game is the only workout I ever get. After 15 minutes of playing with the Nyko I felt like I'd been through a real sparring match. RE4 was also a joy. Without the Nyko, I lost the cord connection a few times when zombies made me jump. But no more of that nonsense with the Cord-Free. I can be as big a spaz as I want to be now.
All in all, this thing does the job Nintendo should have done in the first place. You won't get pulled out of an immersive game experience by a pesky wire tangling up anymore. Twenty bucks! Get it...

And with more letter T power than Mr. T, the T-Megapack ($29.99) gives PSP Slim and regular PSP owners a stiff and opaque case called the T-Travel Bag (sold separately for $12.99), a stereo headset called the T-Stereo (sold separately for $15.99), a UMD carrying case (holds 5 UMD + two memory stick duo cards), a screen protector plus a 2-in-1
The new DualShock 3 arrived at GameDaily HQ today. We took pictures of the unboxing as well as some side by side shots with the SIXAXIS controller. The new controller looks almost identical to the SIXAXIS, save for the name, which appears in blue on the controller and it feels a little weightier. We have it charging right now and will be giving it a go on some of our fave PS3 games tonight.
Blackberry might be the phone of choice for office stiffs, but today Hands-On Mobile announced that its mobile-ready rendition of Guitar Hero III has been released on the pervasive smartphone. Get ready to loosen that tie and rock out! 

Now, this is what Sony should have done with the PlayStation Portable in the first place. An enterprising gearhead nicknamed L0rdNic0 has ripped up his PSP and rebuilt it with two analog control sticks.