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    First glimpse at games….

Yep, there’s been a lot of Zune HD details slipping through recently (which I haven’t been quite keeping up-to-date here at the moment due to personal issues), but one which many of us have been wanting to know more about is gaming. It’s no secret that the Zune HD is going to include games, heck its even been in official promotional material for a few weeks now, but until today we haven’t actually seen what it’s going to look like. 2D, 3D? XNA? Native Code? Better than an iPod Touch?

While we can’t answer the latter questions, just let, looking at the image above shown in a recently released promotional video is footage of the rumoured Burnout game running in full 3D on the Zune HD, thanks to it’s powerful nVidia Tegra processing chip. Undoubtedly Zune HD has more power under it’s hood than the iPod Touch, and it does have a smaller screen resolution to cater for, so we should be looking forward to even more impressive games than on Apples device, although unfortunately it does suffer the same pitfall – no buttons. Not game breaking obviously, but there will be times when they are sorely missed. Still, one more reason to get excited. Just 4 days now.

 Posted by Johnny on 12 Sep 2009 in Games, HD, Rumors, Zune

    Workaround: Getting CCGAME files on your Zune in Windows 7

So you may have heard by now that Microsoft are currently well on their way to shipping their most anticipated Operating System release yet: Windows 7. And many of us, being a the tech lovers we are, have jumped onto Microsoft’s BETA program, already have pre-release versions of the OS up and running on our home PC’s, and many us even taking the risk to use it as our primary OS! For the most part though its entirely stable, so its not that much of a risk. There is one problem though…

It seems CCGAME files are of no use for us Windows 7 users, as the “XNA Game Studio Package Utility”, which deploys the game to the Zune, instantly crashes. Of course this isn’t helpful for me, so I went looking for a possible fix. And, while it seems that as of yet there is a no fix for this (though the XNA team are aware of the issue), there is a workaround for it.

To start us off, download your CCGAME file to your Desktop itself. Next, we need to open the XNA Game Studio Command Prompt. To do this, Open the Start Menu, click All Programs, expand the Microsoft XNA Game Studio 3.0 folder, then expand the Tools folder, then click on XNA Game Studio Command Prompt.

Now, we need to give it some instructions, in this format (Where you replace GAME with the name of CCGAME file saved on your desktop)

xnapack.exe unpack Desktop\GAME.ccgame /run

So, for example, if I were to download PaintZ BETA to my desktop, and would like to install it, I would type in like this:

Now, connect your Zune and turn it on. Make sure the Zune software is closed. Now press enter. Your Zune should enter the XNA Game Studio connection mode. If it fails the first time, don’t worry. Just turn your Zune back on and re-type the instruction into the command prompt. If all goes well, you should end up with something like this:

Congratulations, you’ve now got the game successfully installed on your Zune! Do it again for every game or app you want to install. If you’re still not entirely sure what to do or are getting errors, just ask on this thread in the forums, and we’ll try and help you through!

 Posted by Johnny on 24 Feb 2009 in Article, Exclusive, Games, Guide, XNA

    Games Marketplace Picks for week ending 21 February

So, here’s a new something I’m trying for the weekends, a quick roundup highlighting some of the more interesting games and applications that have hit our Games Marketplace during the past week.

Zune Solitaire
Created by Netrix

Responsible for millions of hours lost of work time on PC’s, the popular single player card game “Solitaire” comes to Zune thanks to coder Netrix, who’s efforts have resulted in a sublime recreation of the game. Featuring well designed graphics, and optimized to help reduce battery consumption, whilst including basic favourite options like 3 card or 1 card draw along with 2 different scoring options, this isn’t just a quick afternoon knock up of the game. A lot of effort was put in, and it really shows. The only think its really missing now is some touch control.

Check it out!

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Zune player with Asian Language support
Created by sectionboy

One of the things the Zune firmware is curiously missing is support for displaying Asian language characters in song info, instead displaying them as square boxes. Of course, for those with large collections of music with these characters, this can be really annoying.

Thankfully, sectionboy has come along with a solution: An XNA based Zune Player! Using a smartly designed GUI, sorting your albums by genre, it natively displays all the Asian font characters. Check out this video to see what its like in action. Of course, performance is better on the Zune 30, but it still works albeit with added slow-down on other models. Its also worth checking out if you just want another cool way of displaying your music on Zune.

Check it out!

 Posted by Johnny on 21 Feb 2009 in Article, Games, Guide, Media, XNA



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