When Nintendo announced Drag x Drive, a Joy-Con mouse-controlled wheelchair sports game, for the Switch 2 I was tentatively excited. I have a lot of time for developers trying new things, and sports video games are hardly replete with disability representation. Having been hands-on with the game, however, Drag x Drive has left me baffled and in significant pain.
As a “driver” – wheeled robots that come in three mostly indistinct flavors: guard, center, and forward – Drag x Drive has you play pickup games of three-on-three wheelchair basketball. You navigate the game by pushing and pulling your Joy-Cons across a surface in a motion vaguely s …
Today's links Ada Palmer's "Inventing the Renaissance": A tour-de-force, a magnum opus, a work of…
Future The People Do Not Yearn for AutomationNilay Patel | The Verge “Not everything about…
The global energy industry has long depended on seismic data to locate oil and gas…
Artificial intelligence is quietly transforming every corner of modern industry. From predictive maintenance in heavy…
Additive manufacturing has always lived in a bit of a gray area. Some see it…
The global energy industry has long depended on seismic data to locate oil and gas…
This website uses cookies.