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@Samuel: Oh, yes. That's why i wrote "problem", since i didn't see where the problem was. And when you replied, i thought you were referring somehow to EU.

Well, the unifying stops somewhere, since after a union is big enough, it loses its meaning. There always need to be "them" or else there's no "us".
If EU took the same route as US, going around the world threatening people, we would see much more unified EU, than it is today. It would strengthen the "us and them" view.

@kyros: That's where your wrong. Most of the (grown-up) people know english "somehow", but well enough to communicate with it or understand what it reads in games that are in english... That's a different story. Then the kids, who are the majority of game buyers, they don't understand enlish, if it's not their native langueage. Look at how much better games do in english speaking countries, opposed to non-english speaking countries. If you have a theory why it wouldn't be because of the language used in games, i'd be happy to listen.



Ei Kiinasti.

Eikä Japanisti.

Vaan pannaan jalalla koreasti.

 

Nintendo games sell only on Nintendo system.