Game series worth a full 3D remake

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goo Ranking this week looked at a survey entitled which game series would people like to play on a big screen 3D television, which implies that the game series chosen get remade for 3D.

Demographics

Over the 21st and 22nd of September 2010 1,072 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 68.2% of the sample were female, 10.4% in their teens, 18.0% in their twenties, 29.8% in their thirties, 26.2% in their forties, 8.7% in their fifties, and 7.0% aged sixty or older. Note that the score in the results refers to the relative number of votes for each option, not a percentage of the total sample.

Not placing anywhere on the list is the Doom series – I’d be interested in seeing a 3D remake of at least Doom 1, preferably with the original sprite-based 3D. The source code is out there, so I’m sure some enterprising soul will remake it (if they haven’t already) for a 3D-supporting device.

And just in case you are wondering what “Loveplus” is, perhaps this will explain:


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Taking a camera on foreign holidays

How many cameras do you take with you on foreign holidays? graph of japanese statisticsThis survey from iShare into enjoying a foreign holiday with a camera is rather appropriate as I’m currently on a foreign holiday business trip in Hawaii, as you can perhaps see from the photo below.

Demographics

Over the 14th and 15th of September 2010 2,468 members of the CLUB BBQ free email forwarding service who had had a foreign holiday completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 75.4% of the sample were male, 44.4% in their thirties, 44.5% in their forties, and 11.1% in their fifties.

I’m usually pretty hopeless at taking photos, both quantity and quality-wise, but hopefully this time at Hawaii I have redeemed myself!

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Software licences usually read by one in three! Really?

Do you read software licences? graph of japanese statisticsSometimes I present surveys that are difficult to believe, and this is one of these cases, a look at software licences by goo Research and rported on by japan.internet.com, where almost one in three who are aware of licences and have installed software in the last year claimed to usually or always read the accompanying licence!

Demographics

Between the 5th and 9th of October 2010 1,093 members of the goo Research online monitor goup completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.7% of the sample were male, 16.6% in their teens, 18.3% in their twenties, 21.3% in their thirties, 16.2% in their forties, 15.6% in their fifties, and 12.1% aged sixty or older.

I am surprised that so many do – it’s just one more click-through for me. Only if I am downloading software that tries to force a spammy toolbar install do I check the licence to see if it mentioned anything about data collection.
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Apple 70%, Google 15% of Japanese smartphone market

How often do you use your main smartphones? graph of japanese statisticsAlthough this recent survey by goo Research and reported on by japan.internet.com showed Apple way out ahead in the smartphone market in Japan, this gap will surely narrow in the near future, not least thanks to Sharp’s soon-to-come iPhone killer.

Demographics

Between the 6th and 8th of October 2010 1,086 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.2% of the sample were male, 16.4% in their teens, 18.2% in their twenties, 21.7% in their thirties, 16.2% in their forties, and 27.4% aged fifty or older.

Sharp’s new IS03 is getting heavy advertising coverage right now, although it does look more like a promotion for Usian Bolt than a cell phone advert. The reason to suspect it might be an iPhone killer is first that Sharp have a track record for producing smartphones even before the term was invented (the W-ZERO3 series mentioned in Q1SQ1) and have made other innovations like the Netwalker (although it priced itself out of the market), but second and more importantly, the IS-03 is an iPhone for the Japanese market, with both One-Seg digital television decoder and FeliCa electronic cash chip on board. Furthermore, the carrier, au, have a much better image than Softbank, so there would be less resistance to switching carrier just for the device. It needs a sexier name than IS-03, however!
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“November” is the hardest month for Japanese

Do you usually have reason to read or write months in English? graph of japanese statisticsThis survey from iShare was educational for me, and I hope it will be educational for some of my readers who may be unaware of the Japanese names in this look at month names, in both English and classical Japanese.

Demographics

Between the 24th and 29th of September 2010 461 members of the CLUB BBQ free email forwarding service completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.5% of the sample were male, 28.6% in their twenties, 30.6% in their thirties, and 40.8% in their forties.

In modern Japanese, the months are ridiculously easy to remember, being basically “Month 1″, “Month 2″, and so on up to “Month 12″, but before they adopted the Gregorian calendar there was a completely different set of names which I rarely see and could not name any of them at all. Note that although in Q1SQ I mention the English month, there’s not really a direct one-to-one correspondence as the old Japanese calendar was lunar-based, so they tended to repeat months here and there to stop things getting horrendously out of sync.
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How to steal a Japanese girl away

Today’s bit of fun from goo Ranking is a look at what one might do if someone they fancied already had a boyfriend or girlfriend, for both men trying to steal women and women trying to steal men.

Demographics

Over the 23rd and 24th of August 2010 1,127 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 57.3% of the sample were female, 11.7% in their teens, 16.5% in their twenties, 29.0% in their thirties, 23.2% in their forties, 10.9% in their fifties, and 8.7% aged sixty or older. Note that the score in the results refers to the relative number of votes for each option, not a percentage of the total sample.

I can speak from experience that for guys to do 1 or 2, and especially both 1 and 2, is the quickest way to convince her you’re gay, or at least completely and utterly herbivorous! Towards the bottom of both lists are techinques that seem pretty much guaranteed to start a fist fight or a cat fight, and as for the second last for men, I think some people have been watching far too many Hollywood romances! Finally, I’m most surprised to see that spreading rumours comes dead last in the women’s list.
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Infrared thrice as popular as Bluetooth when upgrading phones

A popular topic of discussion these days is the Galapagosation (it sounds better in Japanese) of the Japanese phone market, how handsets has evolved to suit the Japanese market (or is it vice versa?). This recent survey from goo Research, reported on by japan.internet.com, their 53rd regular look at mobile upgrade needs showed that many of the desired features are those popular in Japan alone.

Demographics

Between the 28th and 30th of September 2010 exactly 1,000 mobile phone-owning members of the goo Research monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 50.6% of the sample were female, 1.2% in their teens, 15.9% in their twenties, 32.5% in their thirties, 27,4% in their forties, and 23.0% aged fifty or older.

I’m driven by handset price too, with that as the main barrier to me upgrading. Maybe around Christmas I’ll buy last year’s model at a sensible price. I have my heart set on a smartphone, but my wallet says no, however, as the flat rate packet price, as I discuss every time I post about smartphones, is still too high…

As there’s nothing decent to graph, here instead is a video showing how it’s a dog eat dog (stewpot set) market out there…


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Like What Japan Thinks on Facebook

I’m not sure how this will appear in my RSS feed, so if it doesn’t, please click through and press the Like button, if you’re on Facebook. And if you like WJT, of course!

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Mobile phones more essential than maps when mountaineering

Can you get a mobile signal when mountain climbing? graph of japanese statisticsiShare recently conducted a survey that had a nice buzzword in the title, namely Yama (Mountain) Girls, a trend amongst young women to go hillwalking for the fashion as much as for the exercise. However, the headline was the extent of the involvement of the Yama Girls, and it turned out to be a rather ordinary look at mountaineering and hillwalking with a mobile phone instead.

Demographics

Betwen the 15th and 17th of September 2010 1,217 members of the CLUB BBQ who had gone mountaineering or hillwalking with a mobile phone completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 80.5% of the respondents were male, 5.8% in their twenties, 46.8% in their thirties, 34.3% in their forties, and 13.1% in their fifties.

In Q2, note that Mount Takao is within the Tokyo prefecture limits and a mere 599 metres high with a funicular railway, and the 931 metre-high Mount Rokko is within the Kobe city limits and also has two funiculars and a cable car up to the plateau, so they are in quite a different class from the 3776 metres of Mount Fuji!
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mixi users prefered its exclusivity

Do you currently use the SNS site mixi? graph of japanese statisticsWith mobile phone-based SNSes (well, they are more like Social Gaming Services) currently flooding television screens with advertisements, it’s easy to forget about the granddaddy of them all, mixi. goo Research haven’t as this was the subject of a survey they conducted that was reported on by japan.internet.com.

Demographics

Between the 1st and 4th of October 2010 1,083 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.8% of the sample were male, 16.3% in their teens, 18.3% in their twenties, 21.5% in their thirties, 16.3% in their forties, 15.6% in their fifties, and 12.0% aged sixty or older.

I kept meaning to sign up for mixi, and even got an invite from someone, but even now with it going invite-free this March I’ve never felt the urge to sign up, as it would just be something else to ignore along with What Japan Thinks on Facebook.
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