I have all of the three current generation consoles as well. For me, considering you live in Singapore, the PS3 is a no brainer since its games are region free.
I guess I'll do a list thing too, as I've a lot of disorganized thoughts.
Reasons (mostly) for the PS3
- The PS3 supports up to 7 Bluetooth controllers. Great for local sports games like NHL, FIFA, NFL, NBA 2K. The controllers are also easily compatible with your computer if you have a bluetooth chip. It doesn't have the same support on the PC as the Xbox 360 controller, but you'll need a dongle if you want to use the wireless version (propriety signal). The only limitation with the 7 supported devices seems to be for the Move. You can only use two navigation controllers in combination with wands, compared to the possibility of the Wii's 4. I don't know of a Wii game where the four nunchuks are required though, so it may be a non-sequiter.
- The PS3 also has light gun shooters. It has an improved version of House of the Dead: Overkill, and Dead Space Extraction
- No More Heroes has also had an improved version ported to the PS3 (formerly one of the best Wii's exclusives
- All PS3's are compatible with PS1 titles. It's probably not worth getting a model with PS2 backwards compatibility. Some of the best PS2 games are being rereleased in HD compilations, so you can end up with a better deal there anyways. (Metal Gear Solid HD and God of War HD are the big ones so far).
- the PSN store has the best sales of all three consoles. Wii virtual console (classics -- expensive, if you ask me) and Wiiware games don't go on sale at all. Xbox 360 has rare sales, but you often need the Xbox Live Gold subscription. PSN has sales for regular users and if you're a Plus subscriber, you get free games for the life of the subscription every month (if you renew you'll still have them).
- I actually prefer the PS3's UI, the XMB. It's the fastest of the three and doesn't go out of its way with ads or trying to be pretty. The Xbox 360 guide is nice, but unlike the XMB it's not congruent with the dashboard and it's slower. The only advantage for the Xbox UI is viewing achievements, which is just a bit more tedious on the PS3.
The Wii's isn't too bad (pretty much ad-free), but you can't access everything in-game.
- The PS3 has a better browser than the Wii's, the Xbox 360 has none.
- The PS3 is the best console tech-wise, if only slightly. Most games perform better on the Xbox 360 despite this, due to some hardware (Xbox has slightly better RAM) and programming irregularities. The PS3 has 7.1 surround support, is capable of true stereoscopic 3D (KillZone 3, MotorStorm Apocalypse), and has Blu-Ray. The Move has higher accuracy than than the Wii, but unfortunately motion controls seem to be on a very slow burn currently. There are still some things preferable with the Wii's controls, but YMMV.
- The PS3 is most open to third party peripherals. The hard drives are replaceable with laptop drives and the console is slightly more open to controllers than the 360. A significant peripheral are mice which can be customized to play with any PS3 game (I think the Xbox may have one of these too, now).
- My favourite games for the PS3 so far are: Both of the LittleBigPlanets (great Co-op title), Mod Nation Racers, Motorstorm, KillZone 2 and 3
- Some PS3 titles have great support: LBP, GT5, MAG
- Friendlier to MMOs, due to Microsoft policies
- No online fee for multiplayer (DCU being the MMO exception)
- PS3 multiplatform often come with extra goodies due to left over space on the Blu-Ray or publisher deals: Dead Space 2, Medal of Honor, Portal 2 (comes with a PC license), Batman AA, Just Cause 2
- The Xbox controller is just worse for some games like platformers and fighters. Controller peripherals can fix this.
- No changing discs mid-game (mostly insignificant)
- PS3 games have lithium rechargeable batteries built in. A good thing unless they burn out on you completely (should take a few years at least) or if you don't have a decently long USB cord when they're all dead. With Xbox and Wii you have a choice, but the standard is disposable batteries.
Reasons for the Xbox 360
- The Xbox 360 has cross-game mic-chat for Gold subscribers (a lot of people claim to enjoy this feature)
- Some multiplatform games are just better, for whatever reason, on the Xbox 360: Red Dead Redemption, COD, Bayonetta, TES
- The Xbox has some of the best shooters and best supported games of this generation. Halo is particularly famous for 2-console 8-player LAN.
- The Xbox has a controller that feels made for shooters. (for some reason I still perform better with the PS3 controller, but I grew up with the PS2)
- Xbox Live Arcade's selection seems slightly better. There are exclusives to all three.
- Mandatory install is not required for the Xbox 360. On many PS3 games it is.
- Xbox Live's website has better support for the console
- Xbox 360 multiplatforms tend to be slightly cheaper (probably because they sell more)
- Xbox Live plays nicer with allowing multiple sign-ins
- System-wide personal audio. There are a good number of PS3 titles which allow your own audio, but it's not seamless. Personally I consider this feature broken though, as I suffer a lot of skips, stutters and crashes (of either the audio or the whole system). Perhaps I have a hardware issue though (it's always had it).
- Upconversion of DVD resolution to 1080p. Some people swear by it, others say you're better off just sticking to 480p. Can't verify, myself.
- Classic games, including some classic 80s arcade and Sega Saturn games.
- My favourite 360 games so far are COD MW2, Crackdown, and Halo Reach
Reasons for the Wii
- There are some improvements that have been made with the sensor tech. There is a add-on sensor bar which should improve sensitivity and range a lot. The Wii Motion Plus greatly improves the range of movements the Wii can pick up for certain games. Red Steel 2 requires it, for example.
- Though the new Wiis (cheaper models) being sold don't have the Gamecube controllers, they're still manufacturing the ones that do. The Wii U is not supposed to have them anymore, though. They're even still manufacturing a Gamecube controller (white) that has a longer cord than the original one.
- My favourite Wii games are SSMB, RS2, Monster Hunter Tri, and MP Trilogy.
- Has the most silly party games
- The Channels UI does look nice
- Has the best selection of classic games so far. Only place where you can get Nintendo console exclusives (though Rare titles have showed on the 360). The other consoles are gradually catching up though.
Major Console (Xbox/PS3) Multiplatform exclusives (not on PC/Wii)
- Vanquish (serious must-play)
- Dark Souls
- Marvel vs Capcom 2 (downloadable)
- Ninja Gaiden 2
Some big negatives:
- Sony published titles, as of summer 2011 require an online pass for multiplayer, an extra cost for used games . Not all PS3 games will have this, but still a policy annoyance.
- Microsoft has some asinine space limitation policies and control over it's systems. MMOs and the former Windows Live charge are big examples
- Sony removed extra OS, and changed it's game sharing policy. Formerly it was up to five devices of your choice, now it's 2 of each.
- Nintendo's online policies are particularly antiquated. Game sales, demos, multiplayer, all major headaches at best.
- Both Nintendo and Microsoft's consoles seem to be losing steam (software-wise)
Post edited February 06, 2012 by elus89