Inside the Touch Pack for Windows 7: Rebound

Rafael continues his look at the various components of the Windows 7 Touch Feature Pack with a game called Rebound:

Next in the list of toys that Microsoft revealed in the new Touch Pack for Windows 7 is Rebound. Rebound, developed by Fuel Games (the peeps that brought us Tinker), is a simple pong-like game with additions such as electricity, spinning projectiles, futuristic sounds, and clumsy AI; the perfect time vampire. Gameplay consists of a player (or two) placing their fingers on a set of orbs to create an arc of energy, to act as a paddle. The arc's strength and ball stopping ability is dependent on the distance between the player’s orbs. That's the simple rundown.

On the technical side, Rebound is a native Win32 application, tying into the DirectX 9, DirectX10 and PhysX APIs. The latter is interesting because you may get a little physics processing boost if you’re using a fairly recent NVIDIA GPU (Geforce 8 or higher) or if you shelled out for and installed an AGEIA PhysX Accelerator. (If you have a PhysX card lying around collecting dust, send it to me!) With regards to shaders, things are a bit gray. It’s not clear which shader model the game requires but my guess is 2. Shader model 1 is for wimps and 3 is a bit bleeding, compared to today’s typical mass-produced consumer PC. Simply put, if your machine can’t do Aero proper (with transparency), you will have issues playing Rebound. You may be able to speed things up by throwing more memory at it with DOS/4GW, however.

Obligatory game-play video included in original post.

Discuss this Article 14

wqwalter
on May 30, 2009
This all sound great but is there a vendor of a touch screen monitor that I can plug into an existing system. I have had very poor experiences with HP and I have tried the Touchsmart devices on display in many stores and they don't seem very responsive. You have to try things several times before the computer realizes you are touching the screen and even then the response seem to have a lot of lag.
Waethorn
on May 30, 2009
I'd like to see touchscreen vendors offering more inexpensive monitors in the channel with a simple USB connection that doesn't need any special software. It should all work with the built-in Windows functionality and drivers instead of requiring 3rd-party support. Current hardware makers charge way too much, and until you can buy a 22" touchscreen monitor for less than $350 with works with any tower PC, I doubt that touch will be something that any more than a handful of users will see.
robertsjoe
on May 30, 2009
Regarding the limited WIndows 7 edition: "Interesting, but then again, who cares?" I would say that everyone, if not 99.999999% of people care about being able to customise their OS. Dumb move on Microsoft's part.
mikegalos@msn.com
on May 30, 2009
kent The apology is owed to the people you harmed - those you lied to. That you don't understand a lie's harm to anyone but the subject shows a lack of emotional maturity that you might want to work on.
mikegalos@msn.com
on May 30, 2009
bobbiejoe "99.999999% of people care about being able to customise their OS" Even I'll admit that's not fair. OS X's one-size-darn-well-better-fit-all version has more than 0.000001% of the OS market.
robertsjoe
on May 30, 2009
Evil Microsoft: Microsoft A History of Anti Competitive Behavior and Consumer Harm http://www.scribd.com/doc/15732062/Microsoft-A-History-of-Anti-Competiti...
robertsjoe
on May 30, 2009
@mickeygalos: Now you're deflecting because you know I am right. People DO want to customise these things. No matter how much you want to prattle on about choice. There is no choice when given a crippled OS like Windows 7 Limited Like Nothing Else Edition.
g6672D
on May 30, 2009
Touchscreens just don't feel right. You can use them for crude gesturing, much like the Wiimote. But they just don't work for anything precision. But the big problem with them is that they are often made by your typical vendor, and have lots of crapware and custom drivers and so on. Not fun. ->robertsjoe What OS do you use?
robertsjoe
on May 31, 2009
g6672D: Windows, OS X, Ubuntu.
robertsjoe
on May 31, 2009
lotsamystuff
on May 31, 2009
@robertsjoe: Good post, even thought it's OT. Let's see if the WinJihadists get as upset about that as they do Apple's supposed "evil" software updates that can be disabled with a checkbox. At least they give their users a choice (something the WinJihadists always preach, but clearly don't have the intellectual honesty to care about in reality).
shark47
on May 31, 2009
"So Shark47, if I choose to make a statement that there is something wrong with you if you use Windows or admire Gates or Ballmer too much, then feel free to make post like you did. Until then "move away from the keyboard"." I never said there was anything wrong with you because you worship Jobs. That's your prerogative. The fact that you do is evident from your comments. FYI, I admire Gates, but not because of what he did at MS. I admire him because of what he's doing now. "@robertsjoe: Good post" Awww. That is so cute.
tayme
on May 31, 2009
Since mikegalos decided to use this thread to continue the discussion from the previous one, I am guessing that he will soon be responding to my question on if he thinks that its a good idea to not allow a user the ability to do something as simple as changing the wallpaper. Ha! Doubtful. mikegalos avoids giving direct answers to questions that reveal his double standards. He would rather let that show by being an arrogant, one sided fool. --tayme
tayme
on May 31, 2009
@robertsjoe - "People DO want to customise these things." You are right...Those same people want to customize their iPhone/iPod Touch wallpaper....not just when it is locked, but when in use...oh, and they'd like to make the icons smaller. Can you show me how to accomplish that without 3rd party hacks, please? --tayme

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