I had Lost Planet in my hands at Microcenter today, but I couldn't bring myself to spend the $60 on a game I'm not sure I really really want. Instead, I got the limited edition of Prey (for the 360) for the same price as the regular version: $30. 2 pewter figurines and an art pamphlet, but the big tin can is actually a minus. It's bulky, doesn't fit in well with the rest of my games, and the disc is stupidly attached to the bottom of the can, under everything, including the molded plastic & fuzzy stuff insert that holds everything else. Now I need to find me a standard DVD case somewhere. Too bad I threw out an AOL mailer or two, and fairly recently too.
I'm in the middle of Gears of War (finally). Awesome, awesome game. (Gee, Capcom, you can do a roll, in any direction, without making you think twice about moving too soon after stopping? Wow, who would have thought it possible?) The achievements say I finished 3 chapters. I didn't pay enough attention while playing to where a chapter ends and the next begins. It's all so seamless. I have to praise the devs for giving me such good controls over the lighting too. And while I'm not too sure yet, it seems like they're handling the 1280x768 res I have it set to correctly, meaning it doesn't seem to be just 720P stretched out to a 16:10 ratio. Circles look like circles, and nobody looks too tall or skinny. (Course, these jarheads probably would never look that way even streched up that 11%.) I'm playing on casual difficulty, and that's fine for me. Not too many frustrations, but still a good challenge. I'll ramp up to the other settings after I finish, maybe.
Anything new to report on Lost Planet, Scott? I did read your post, and it leaves me with the impression that you're on the fence about it. My experience with the demo was that you have a limited time to run through each area, or your life support runs out and you die. Are you always running against a tight clock? (I generally don't like that kind of pressure in a game.)