Yeah, the proprietary memory cards needs to stop. They literally prevent me from buying more games when I can't store them all in one place. The PSP had some nice alternate 3rd party cards that I found useable but this new vita card is so small I don't have too much hope for a work around (the PSP had an adapter that allowed the mini-memory sticks which meant I could use mini-memory sticks like they were games and swap them out as desired).amaranth_dru said:I am an early adopter of the Vita. My only complaint is the lack of games, but it plays what we have just fine. I really enjoy it, especially playing PSP games like Dissidia 012.
Things that I think would make the Vita a success aside from 3rd party development increases:
1. Add PS2 emulation and open up the classics library. I already enjoy the PSX games I own on the Playstation Network on my Vita (Symphony of the Night on a handheld is a great time waster) and I believe it would benefit the system greatly to have PS2 classics playable.
2. Follow through on the Crossplay/Crossbuy promise.
3. Add Flash/Shockwave support
4. Add a Vita indie development channel.
5. Lower price on the memory cards. I currently own 2x 4gb and 1x 8gb, mostly due to lucky finds when walking around a Walmart looking down at my feet.
I really feel the Vita is akin to the Dreamcast in that it has a lot of damn good potential but is being screwed by lack of 3rd party support. If it dies out I hope there will be a community dedicated to prolonging its life by developing at the very least some emulated game support.
I do feel the platform with its dual touchpads could really do well in the RTS market. Or even turn-based strategy (PORT XCOM ALREADY!!)
Also during travel I really enjoy using Netflix on there because of its crisp display. I am however unimpressed with the "mobile" component that makes it technically a "phone" but without any real phone support except for Skype which I do not use.