Today Sony announced that the Playstion Vita was swiftly approaching what it described as “full functionality” and will soon be able to do what everyone expected it to do in the first place. This revelation means that soon the Vita will be able to play all PS1 games, connect to the internet and even tell the time.
“We’re extremely excited,” said Fredrick Guntherberg, Head of the PS Vita recovery program. “The fact that we’re actually beginning to deliver on the promise of basic functionality is a huge step up from the initial product. We’re even beginning to get some decent games on the platform; LittleBigPlanet PS Vita is actually quite fun, I’ve played some of it even when I didn’t have to!”
The recent and indeed rapid succession of Vita updates has surprised users and provided many with far more things to do than they first thought.
“I was utterly bewildered when I turned my Vita on and discovered I could play the games I’d bought on it!” said an anonymous source “I was looking forward to just staring at the start up screen for a good hour, but now I can play my copy of Resident Evil 2 and everything. To be honest it feels like the console was designed to do this, so I’m surprised I’m only discovering it now.”
These new features also closes off the opportunity for owners of the Vita to sue Sony for failing to provide a product that does what it’s supposed to do in the first place.
Sony has been on a roll, folks, and this just continues it. Between this and PS3 Printer Summit 2012, it sure is a great time to be a Sony fan!
Pixel Grater is so unprofessional. I can’t believe you didn’t know that that’s a floppy drive reader in the back of the Vita. Journalism is dead!
We apologise for our lack of information on this feature niceready, however following things Sony products can do is an almost impossible task. We also recently discovered the Vita can take your blood pressure. We don’t know why or how but it’s in these update notes.