Author Topic: What will Nintendo do next?  (Read 2031 times)


I really hope they evolve the NX into something that is far better then the Wii. What Nintendo really needs is a new legend, a new NES if you will. The Wii and DS are a good start, but Nintendo needs something bigger.
The wii and ds are old hat, it's now the wii u and 3ds.

Let's not forget that the original wii is nintendo's best selling console, so you could argue the wii is also a legend.

To be fair, the 3DS is just a DS with 3D. The NES is like F&F Tokyo Drift and the Wii is like Fast 5. The NES is the one everyone gets nostalgic over. I'm not sure I would go so far as to call the Wii a "legend", more so a sales success.

Sure it was very popular when it came out (and extremely hard to get). But the NES is the genesis (pun absolutely intended). The NES has cemented itself in history, whereas the Wii is a bit like a one hit wonder.

Aside for that though, I would actually be very intrigued to see a Waluigi themed game.

how would you measure the success of a console other than by how many units it sells tho? considering nearly twice as many wiis were sold compared to NES consoles, i'd say the wii's earned its place in history.

we don't rly know much about the NX tho. it's probably going to iterate on the wii u somehow, but there's really not much to go from

To be fair, the 3DS is just a DS with 3D.
As well as being an upgrade to the ds in pretty much every technical aspect.

how would you measure the success of a console other than by how many units it sells tho?

The legacy it leaves behind, think about it. The NES is the very reason why kids have XBOnes and PS4s these days (aside from a few other important consoles I'm forgetting).

The NES is important to the history of gaming even with it's less then ideal sales figure. Success isn't always measured in sales, but rather what (insert whatever here) it leaves behind. Sure it didn't sell well, but the NES put Nintendo on the map for years to come.

I find that one of Nintendo's key objectives in their business is to reach a wide audience, and I think that the phenomena that struck with Wii Sports where people ranging from children to elders were playing together is very significant to consider. For a long time since its release there would always pop up a news story on how like elders would have increased motor capabilities after playing Wii games, fitness instructors were using it in like gyms, and how like surgeons had increased precision after playing on the Wii (I have no source to back this up but it's likely you can recognize hearing some of these anyway) - not to mention the plethora of broken televisions that emerged from that era. I feel like they were able to reach such a wide audience in the first place because at the time, motion controls were revolutionary and a wider audience could understand how it works, just like how at the time, the NES was revolutionary because you could go home and play video games for the first time without hitting up an arcade. Of course, the big mark that the NES did was save the video game industry from the video game crash and it did indeed make Nintendo somewhat of a household name, but I think that although the Wii didn't quite save a falling video game industry, Nintendo being a household name was also supported by the Wii's release. Believe what you want, but I think the Wii was just as pivotal in Nintendo's mark in history as was the NES; it's debatable which one had more of an effect but I find it hard to say that the Wii was not a large effect.

Also, you can't say the NES is the very reason that Microsoft and Sony have video game consoles these days when you yourself stated that there are a "few other important consoles that [you're] forgetting"; you can say it is ONE of the reasons. The Intellivision, the Atari 2600/5200, and the Odyssey are prime examples that also were revolutionary in that they made a way for people to play, like, pong at home, and these came out a couple years earlier. Now, I'm not saying I don't like the NES in any way (and I'm not saying the Wii is without major faults as opposed to the NES - the Wii was officially acknowledged by Nintendo to have great limitations hardware wise and software wise, it did not give Nintendo the numbers they truly desired, and maybe the concept of reaching a wide audience did not appeal to everyone), I just feel that by neglecting the impact of other consoles your argument feels a bit more one-note/conceded, which isn't to offend you or your opinion, I just believe you're not giving these other consoles enough credit.
« Last Edit: July 15, 2016, 02:15:04 AM by Flamecannon »

As long as they keep publishing Fire Emblem I'm good.

I find that one of Nintendo's key objectives in their business is to reach a wide audience, and I think that the phenomena that struck with Wii Sports where people ranging from children to elders were playing together is very significant to consider. For a long time since its release there would always pop up a news story on how like elders would have increased motor capabilities after playing Wii games, fitness instructors were using it in like gyms, and how like surgeons had increased precision after playing on the Wii (I have no source to back this up but it's likely you can recognize hearing some of these anyway) - not to mention the plethora of broken televisions that emerged from that era. I feel like they were able to reach such a wide audience in the first place because at the time, motion controls were revolutionary and a wider audience could understand how it works, just like how at the time, the NES was revolutionary because you could go home and play video games for the first time without hitting up an arcade. Of course, the big mark that the NES did was save the video game industry from the video game crash and it did indeed make Nintendo somewhat of a household name, but I think that although the Wii didn't quite save a falling video game industry, Nintendo being a household name was also supported by the Wii's release. Believe what you want, but I think the Wii was just as pivotal in Nintendo's mark in history as was the NES; it's debatable which one had more of an effect but I find it hard to say that the Wii was not a large effect.

Also, you can't say the NES is the very reason that Microsoft and Sony have video game consoles these days when you yourself stated that there are a "few other important consoles that [you're] forgetting"; you can say it is ONE of the reasons. The Intellivision, the Atari 2600/5200, and the Odyssey are prime examples that also were revolutionary in that they made a way for people to play, like, pong at home, and these came out a couple years earlier. Now, I'm not saying I don't like the NES in any way (and I'm not saying the Wii is without major faults as opposed to the NES - the Wii was officially acknowledged by Nintendo to have great limitations hardware wise and software wise, it did not give Nintendo the numbers they truly desired, and maybe the concept of reaching a wide audience did not appeal to everyone), I just feel that by neglecting the impact of other consoles your argument feels a bit more one-note/conceded, which isn't to offend you or your opinion, I just believe you're not giving these other consoles enough credit.

I applaud you for showing me your point of view (which you are totally correct on btw) and not bashing me in any way. I should give other consoles more credit but in all truth I don't know of many other consoles outside of the NES (and maybe the Genesis if that was around the same time period).

I just find the NES (and other consoles of that time period) to be a "Evolutionary" step in gaming whereas the Wii (and other consoles of that time period) being a "Revolutionary" step in gaming. I am happy that this started a discussion though (not what I said but the thread itself).

they'll make another mario game and cash in again.

It better not be "Mario Go!"

To be fair, the 3DS is just a DS with 3D.

it has a ton of upgrades, has a thumbpad, two if you include the New 3DS

It better not be "Mario Go!"

highly doubt it, pokemon at least made sense for an outdoor explore travel thing

I'll rephrase what I said then, the 3DS is just a DS with a technical upgrade and added features.

I'll rephrase what I said then, the 3DS is just a DS with a technical upgrade and added features.

...so?



OT: i hope they add a GC virtual console to the wii u eshop because i want to play paper mario TTYD

yeah and a hammer is just a stick with a metal piece on top
why bother buying a hammer when a stick is pretty much the same thing?