Either our buddies over in Japan really love small, fat bird creatures or Piyotama is getting the royal treatment for no real reason. In the past, we've had Christmas skins and before that, a Halloween skin. Now those birdies are getting dressed for Valentine's Day.
WorthPlaying writes, "On Monday Sony announced it was giving away four free games to PlayStation Vita owners in order to celebrate the one year anniversary of the portable console in North America.
In order to download the four games, you were supposed to access the PSN store via a Vita. And, for the most part, that was true. When the PSN store updated on Tuesday evening, the “purchase” option for the four games was removed from the PS3 PSN store and the Sony Entertainment Network PSN store on the web. However, Sony seems to have forgotten that the PSP can also access the PSN store."
The promotion was initially announced as being exclusive to the Vita store. That's why the free games cannot be "purchased" on either the PS3 store or the web store.
Thank you worthplaying.com. I didn't even realize that this offer was going on. You managed to both inform me and solve a problem at the same time. (^_^)
From the article, "See, Sony’s giving away free games to all Vita owners. You don’t have to have PlayStation Plus. You just need to have a Vita between March 5-11, 2013. I’d say it’s probably one of the smartest moves Sony could make at the moment. Now that the Vita has hit the one year mark, people are going to become even more critical and pick at sales figures and game releases even more. When a system is a year old, you expect it to start getting comfortable and for numerous game announcements to start spilling out. The Vita isn't settled and only a few new games have been announced. By counteracting that with a handful of good, free games, Sony is heading off ill will and customer discontent by instantly expanding people’s libraries."
The Bitbag writes: "In my experience, most action puzzlers fall within two categories: the stage based game in which there are infinite resets/retries to unlock the “trick” in each stage (like Echochrome), or the more common high score leveler (Tetris, Bust-a-Move). Piyotama Hero falls within the latter category and tries to take the genre a little further than its gone before, with mixed results."