Ground breaking and good 3rd party support are great for any system. They all need this. 🙂
True, but the Wii needs it the most because it has the least to offer consumers, and Nintendo's last two home consoles had pathetic 3rd party support so they also need it to save face in the eyes of most gamer consumers.
The Wii is sitting strong right now and already has a healthy list of developers working away on new ideas for it, not just rehashes. But like anything, it takes time, not just 8 months.
Agreed. I hope that for everyone's sake, we're not complaining about a lack of interesting Wii titles by this time next year otherwise the system will be in a heap of trouble.
Mini games bring friends and family together, there's allot to be said about that. Motion works better for these games than just pressing a button, so there's little chance will see that going away anytime soon. 😉
Is it good to bring people together? Sure.
Does it need to become an integral part of the system's library? No. Enthusiastically - no.
If you want me to ballpark it or put a number out there - IMO no more than 10% of the console's library should be comprised of minigames. As it stands now...it's well over 10%. I won't argue semantics or compare game lists, but I know when I go into Blockbuster to look over the games they have for rent, the majority of the Wii titles I see I would classify as a minigame collection, and that's not a good thing (at least in my book).
I can't see people trading their systems in droves. This seems to be something younger gamers do, where as more recent polls have shown that the majority of gamers are people my age. People my age have less time for games, so mini games, quick games like WC3 DOTA, or quick death matches are the best solution for me and my friends.
This is a fine idea, and a fine sentiment, but when we're talking about a minigame collection being $20 or $30 as opposed to a full $50 or $60 dollars, then that's when I draw the line and say "there's a problem".
If I pay $50 or $60 for a game, I expect things like features I can take advantage of. I'm not saying multiplayer or online play is a deal breaker, but two games stacked side by side, one of which includes online play, multiplayer, online leaderboards, updates, patches, expansions, HD graphics and sound, etc. for the same $50 as another game that has local multiplayer and nothing more (ie outdated graphics and sound)- well I won't be purchasing that latter $50 that is missing all of those other features of game #1. I want more bang for my buck, period.
I'm sorry, but the Wii has one thing going for it in terms of hardware, and that's motion-based control (which is practically an all-or-nothing idea that they've thrown their hats into). There's nothing wrong with that, but if they (Nintendo and their 3rd parties) cannot grasp more ideas than what they have now, then the system is doomed. At least with the other two consoles, you get a lot more for your money, and you can usually count on other things remaining constant, which is high end graphics/sound and online support.
I've been gaming a long time (I'm 29) and I'm not jaded on Nintendo anymore. They screwed up quickly with the last two consoles of theirs I owned (and I've owned every Nintendo console except the Virtual Boy) and it's not something I'll just shrug off and say "that's ok, I grew up on Mario". I hope for their sake they turn things around, but if they don't...well don't expect me to be defending their actions this time around when people bring up a "why Nintendo f'd up" list.
😱