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Reader Comments (25)

Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:04PM TheBatman4141 said

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Well done!
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:04PM eat it said

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very nice. and in the best game of it's genre too.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:06PM Friv0lous said

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Classy move, now one of these one button bandits needs to throw the first no hitter
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Posted: Jan 26th 2011 3:11AM stagegr said

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@Friv0lous different game bro
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:09PM benjamines said

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I know Hans! He's one of the coolest guys I know.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:57PM ChillyWilly said

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@benjamines

I was ready to downvote you b/c at first glance I thought you wrote "I no hands." Kinda funny that I thought you were being extremely insensitive when you were just saying the dude is cool.

Upvote for you to compensate for my too hasty almost downvote :)
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:13PM shabby329 said

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Bravo! More game companies need to take disabled gamers into account. My mom was born without a left hand and unfortunately never could get into games. She used to try and play nes with me one-handed when I was a kid and actually got pretty good at it, but once controllers got more complicated she was out of luck. The wii has been her gaming renaissance but even she wants HD graphics at this point and its nice that other companies are trying to help a typically ignored group of people have the ability to play games. I realize its likely not profitable but it's the right thing to do and builds respect from the customer (at least from me).
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 4:41PM Raniz85 said

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@shabby329
Perhaps you guys should have a look at this: http://www.disabled-world.com/entertainment/games/gaming-controls.php

Or that controller Ben Heck made on his show for a kid who had no right arm (should be no problem with mirroring it for right-handed use, both the PS3 and X360 controllers are rather symmetrical). He moved the right joystick to the bottom of the controller so he could push it against his knee and use the joystick by moving the entire controller. He also made a rig for controlling the A/B/X/Y/shoulder-buttons with your feet.
http://www.element-14.com/community/docs/DOC-24280/l/episode-1-ben-mods-a-xbox-360
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 5:03PM shabby329 said

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@Raniz85 Thanks a lot for the info, I had no idea this existed. Actually pretty affordable too!
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 5:23PM ND92 said

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@shabby329 Even though few developers are taking initiative like this, she can play plenty of touch screen games, of which there are many now with the iOS platform. just a thought

Very considerate of them, kind of like color blind modes in other games. But this is clearly going the extra mile
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 7:36PM maveric101 said

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@shabby329

you've probably realized this, but i would think that Kinect games should work pretty well for her.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:31PM zack11190 said

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Sweet! The Cards are beating the Cubs 1-0.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 5:08PM IsItInYet said

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@zack11190
As a Cubs fan I should downvote you, but as a realist that sounds pretty accurate.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 5:13PM IsItInYet said

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@IsItInYet

Also my 2 cents:
I'm glad Sony and Valve (I'm sure there's others) are reaching out to handicapped gamers. A kid without a right hand won my local GameStop's Guitar Hero contest and when I asked him if there were other games he could play he didn't have much of an answer. I walked away thinking about how there's probably a market for these types of gamers that no one has capitalized on yet.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 2:40PM dawnofthesean85 said

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I wonder if they are going to disable achievements when its on?
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 3:03PM Xeno378 said

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Kudos, Sony San Diego! It's nice to see developers who care so much about their fans. Sadly, it's generally the exception rather than the rule.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 3:53PM cleanunderscoreme said

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awesome! As a quadriplegic and one that likes the game of baseball this is great news! Hopefully they can do this with hockey as well as the new games have so many add-ons it makes it impossible to play. I don't know why all games don't come with completely customizable controller button layouts. A good example is Gran Turismo 5, you can make any button do any task, even duplicates. Also, the resistance series has customizable controls but you have to swap out one control button for another. I just don't know how to get in touch with developers to voice my opinion as I'm sure it's not hard to implement. Hopefully some developers read this post!

Thank you joystiq!
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 3:55PM The Albatross said

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As a non-handicapped gamer, I might play this way just given how bad I absolutely sucked at MLB '10...
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 4:20PM vidjagamer said

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Good on Sony San Diego!
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 4:23PM pro cow tipper said

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Thank you! My brother is in a wheelchair and could never play baseball games
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 6:31PM John Deadly said

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Great story! Props to the MLB 11 team for taking the time to be inclusive.
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 7:19PM aughscreennames said

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I played the demo to this to test out 3d and the timing was super hard when at bat, even with one button do people with cerebral palsy have quick reaction times to play baseball games?
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 10:55PM Riley Freeman said

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Gamers can be disabled too. My friend Mickey, lost his had at birth. He beats me on Madden:(
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Posted: Jan 25th 2011 11:25PM mcnerven said

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Too many people focus on games as a detrimental influence on youth, but this story shows that the industry has great potential for good deeds.

It's sort of like World of Warcraft or Second Life. Sure, people become addicted and obsessive, but it also allows individuals to explore and interact in a way that's inaccessible to them in real life due to some unfortunate physical impairment.
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Posted: Jan 26th 2011 9:17AM PercyChuggs said

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Oh, the things I could do with my other hands now....
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