The games that will define PlayStation 3
Discover an exciting list of exclusive games com🗹ing to PS3
LITTLEBIGPLANET
What is it?
First shown at this year's Game Developers Conference, LittleBigPlanet is a physic༺s-happy side-scrolling p✅uzzler set in a charming cartoon-like world.
You control a little woollen doll-thing, which can be given its own unique look, and aim to manipulate the world in ta𝄹ndem with your buddies to finish each level - or just to see what happens next.
Why should you care?
LittleBigPlanet is magic. It had jaded hacks smi🌳ling like giddy toddlers with its oh-so-cheerful visual style and toylike gameplay. But its innocent appeal doesn't mean it's just another game for kids - it's a title with subtlety, incredible levels of depth and a wealth of brain-taxing physics gameplay.
Sewn together by the leftfield creative minds behind cult PC game Rag Doll Kung Fu, LittleBigPlanet is both an incredible coup for P🎃S3 💖and proof of Sony's interest in unconventional, stimulating gaming.
The game effectively enables you to use the S⛦ixaxis like a puppeteer, with a hold of L2 and R2 making each stick control a separate arm. Or🦩 - get this - you can make your little doll frown with a touch on the D-pad, angle the Sixaxis to tilt its head south, and then make it lumber along in a gloomy plod. That's enough to make us grin while we write this, and there's so much more besides.
But it's actually also a world-building game, and the potentialof what this means is so huge we have to retirౠe to a dark room whenever we think about it for too long. Especially when you factor in the ability to trade levels you've created over PS Network.
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Or what about the fact that you can build co-operatively with your friends in cr🐬azy, laughter-breeding real-time. Or the way this co-op manipulating will be woven into the gameplay by developer-devised challenges, or... ah, time for anothꦦer lie down.
When can you play it?
Sony has potentially PS3's most exciting game on its hands here, so there's no chance of a rushed release - even if LittleBigPlanet fulfills its potential to become a poster-game hero for attracting new owners. A launch in 2008 is reasonab♔le, with a teasing demo hopefully hitting the Network this year.
Ben Richardson is a former Staff Writer for Official PlayStation 2 magazine and a former Content Editor of GamesRadar+. In the years since Ben left GR, he has worked as a columnist, communications officer, charity coach, and podcast host – but weౠ still look back to his news stories from time to time, theꦑy are a window into a different era of video games.