But I think that the asynchronous play is actually going to be more important. MW: It is exactly the same game apart from traffic density and number of players online. PSB: What kind of compromises are we talking about exactly? Some of those are fundamental, which you learn to overcome as development progresses, and others you have to make some compromises. MW: You just run across performance challenges. PSB: What were the main challenges you met during development? All those principles looked like they were achievable on the machine, so that was what we set out to do. As much as we possibly could, we wanted to deliver all the great things about the console version of the game: an open world, freedom, choice, variety, highly connected. Matt Webster, Producer at Criterion Games: It was to make the same game – that was the goal. PlayStation.Blog: What was your goal when you first started developing the PS Vita version of Most Wanted? We sat down with Matt earlier this week to find out exactly how Criterion has pulled it off. Producer Matt Webster and his team have squeezed almost the entire experience onto the handheld, and even found room for a little bit of extra content exclusive to the system. That the PlayStation 3 version is very, very good should come as no surprise, but somewhat more unexpected is the amount of care the studio has lavished on replicating the experience on PlayStation Vita. Next week sees the keenly anticipated release of Need for Speed Most Wanted, the latest release from Criterion Games – the legendary UK racing specialist behind the Burnout series and Need For Speed: Hot Pursuit, the phenomenal 2010 entry in EA’s long-running street racing franchise.
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