My only issue is the lag: there's definitely a millisecond delay between your hand and the on-screen representation with Move and Sports Champions. The game rarely gets thrown out of calibration (unlike the Motion Plus which requires constant retooling in most real world situations), and senses light and hard swings, recognizes when you've reached forward, backward and moved the wand side to side, something that both the stock Wii remote and one that's Motion Plus enhanced have a hard time doing. ![]() The Move controller is newer technology so it makes sense that it allows for more freedom of motion. And while Nintendo was first to market, each game – with the exception of Bocce, maybe – performs significantly better with the Move-driven Sports Champions. Even Bocce can be considered this game's Wii Bowling. Table Tennis, Disc Golf, Archery, and Gladiator Duel are completely comparable because they offer the exact same experience in Nintendo's motion-sensing compilation. Each item in the pack, with the exception of volleyball, has a Wii Sports Resort equivalent. ![]() Sports Champions does a great job showing off just how versatile and responsive the Move controller is in its group of six different sports designs. So it makes sense that the first game out of the gate would be a compilation that shows all the nifty things it can do in a casual-friendly package. ![]() Play Craig Harris Sony's already embracing the Wii remote design with Move – at its core the controller similar technology but in reverse, with the "sensor bar" attached to the motion controller and the camera at the TV.
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