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The Xperia Play is available from Verizon Wireless and costs $200 with a two-year contract.
The Xperia Play is available from Verizon Wireless and costs $200 with a two-year contract.
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Getting your player ready...

WASHINGTON — Sony makes PlayStation game consoles and, through a joint venture, cellphones. Gamers have been asking for years why it hasn’t combined the two products. Well, it finally has, with Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play.

Sadly, though, this is not the “PlayStation phone” gamers have been hoping for. It is a solid machine that will feel immediately comfortable to PSP users, but it doesn’t yet have anywhere near the breadth and depth of games you’d expect from something with “Play” in its name.

At launch, only one classic PlayStation game is available: the delightful but dated “Crash Bandicoot.” This is disappointing, particularly since it’s the first time Sony has allowed its PlayStation games to run on hardware not directly made by Sony. (Sony Ericsson is a joint venture with Sweden’s LM Ericsson AB and substantially independent from either parent company.)

The Xperia Play is available from Verizon Wireless and costs $200, with a two-year contract. As on many smartphones, a panel slides it out from under the screen. But it doesn’t contain the usual keyboard. Instead, there’s a full set of arcade controls that look like what might happen if you flattened a PlayStation controller to (almost) two dimensions.

On the left are directional controls (up, down, left, right). On the right are the now familiar PlayStation buttons (triangle, square, circle, X). In the middle are two pressure-sensitive plates meant to duplicate the two joysticks on the PlayStation DualShock controller. Left and right triggers — which land where your index fingers should be — round out the game controls. All those buttons make the Xperia Play, at two-thirds of an inch, a little thicker than most smartphones.

The game menu appears whenever you open the device. Besides “Crash Bandicoot,” it’s loaded with a variety of games that have been hits on other cellphone networks: Electronic Arts’ “The Sims 3” and “Madden NFL 11,” Gameloft’s “Asphalt 6: Adrenaline” and “Star Battalion,” and Digital Legends’ “Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior.”

More games can be downloaded through Verizon’s VCast store.While the 4-inch screen isn’t as vivid as the PSP’s, it is bright and sharp enough that your eyes don’t get tired during prolonged gaming sessions. The battery gave me about five hours of playtime; Sony Ericsson says it can deliver up to seven hours and 40 minutes of talk time. The two front- and back-facing cameras shoot adequate still pictures and video.

In short, the Xperia Play delivers just about everything you’d expect in a top-of-the- line smartphone. What it doesn’t deliver — yet — is the quality of gaming you get from a dedicated device.

PlayStation fans who are in the market for a smartphone should consider it, but it won’t replace your PSP.

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