Posted on Thursday 9-Jun-2011 11:14 AM

E3 2011: Wii U sounds 'pretty f***ing cool', says excited Levine

But Bioshock creator needs proof before diving in...

See all of CVG's E3 2011 coverage

BioShock creator Ken Levine has told CVG he's excited by the prospect of the Wii U as a gamer, but hasn't decided whether or not developing for the new Nintendo console makes sense for Irrational Games.

Sitting down for an E3 chat, Levine squashed outright the notion that his appearance on the screen at Nintendo's E3 press conference, along with other big industry names, meant that Bioshock Infinite will be appearing on the Wii U.

See his full answer in video form below:

Early accounts suggest it looks like the Wii U has the power to play AAA titles, at least.

Have a look at the tech demo that came out of E3 earlier this week.

Recommended Links
From The Web

Comments

5 comments so far...

  1. KK-Headcharge78 on 9 Jun '11 said:

    Oh well we differ there I think it sounds pretty s**t.

  2. palmer830 on 9 Jun '11 said:

    what sounds s**t about it?? I think its a good idea. My g/f is always making me switch off the xbox in the lounge and now i can continue playing on a small screen. If you mention the graphics then knowone knows what it can produce. The demo looked very good to me.

  3. Beetle Bum on 9 Jun '11 said:

    Oh well we differ there I think it sounds pretty s**t.

    Me and you differ to, i think it sounds good.
    I think your name is s**t tho, its sounds like your s**t at games and it sounds like i can kick your ass at very game you play lol.

    you sound like a typical dull, depressed, grumpy, miserable english man who likes to moan and moan.

  4. groble on 9 Jun '11 said:

    Did levine just say that the games shown on the big screen for the WiiU launch might not even be on the platform?

  5. KippDynamite on 9 Jun '11 said:

    I thought the Wii sounded kind of cool at first as well, and especially liked the idea of FPSs, but I was mistaken. Adding a picture of a golf ball on an SD screen isn't my idea of innovation.