Alright, a quick disclaimer: this post is not about an Xbox 360 game. it is about a Wii game. Thank you. Now, if you own a Wii (and some of us do here at X3F), chances are you have picked up (or plan on picking up)
Super Smash Bros. Brawl. If you have done this, you'll know that it is one of the few games that supports online play. If you know
that, you probably know that it does not support any kind of voice chat. So, how do we fix that? With
Xbox Live of course! After the break we have come up with a quick guide for getting your
Brawl on complete with voice chat.
What you will need:
- <LI _extended="true">Friends (you'll need to enter Brawl's onerous friend codes to play with them) <LI _extended="true">Xbox 360, controller, and headset (wireless is ideal here), Halo 3
- Wii, Super Smash Bros. Brawl
So, first thing's first. You'll want to set up a chat connection on your Xbox 360 with whomever you plan to play. "But wait!" you say, "you can only have one other person in private chat!" Ah, but that's what
Halo 3 is for! Actually, any game that includes multiplayer lobbies will work, so long as those lobbies don't have a timeout. All you have to do is fire up
Halo 3 and host a private room for your
Smash Bros. buddies. Have them join your
Halo 3 lobby, fire up
Brawl, and have them join your game. Voilå,
Smash Bros. with voice chat.
We should mention that this workaround should also work using Skype or any other VOIP app (or a plain ol' cell phone for that matter). However, the Xbox Live method comes with the bonus of being able to play rounds of
Halo 3 (or your 360 game of choice) in between rounds of
Smash Bros. We should also mention that if you don't have a wireless headset, you will have a 360 controller tethered to you at all times. Be sure you pick it up along with your Wii controller if you have to stand up for any reason. We tell you this from experience, as we sent our 360 controller flying when we stood up to answer the phone.
So there you go! Enjoy your
Smash and
Halo sandwich.