bigjon said:
people are talking about the Wii version, non-traditional gamers who like Wii controls are interested in playing a Game set in WW2 (and most likely modern warfare too) on these controls. They dont like the traditional gamepads. Also, did you note I made this thread on cmas, before brett adjust it up a bit, it appears it needed more. I still think 2 million is tough, and not a sure thing... but I think it can do it. But if anything, this is a good sign for the Conduit, a FPS game that is clearly over shadowed by 2 monsters is seeing solid sales, I think the Conduit which will have the spotlight to itself can shine if its quality Warrents it. |
What exactly are "people" saying? Do you have conversations you want to run off?
Also what you just said about this being good for the Conduit completely contradicts what you said earlier in the thread. Reposted:
I know several people who are not interested in Halo/Resitance games, but like Tom Clancy/ Call of Duty esque stuff. Also, parents buy games for stupid reasons. I actually know a parent who bought CoD:WaW for their kid because of its "historical" value compared to other games, also someone who is very Patriot would be intruiged by a WW2 game or Modern Warfare, or a kid who wants to be a soldier when he grows up. IMO most scifi type people are already "gamer" types, they may not be hard core, but gaming is "in" for them.
So which is it? Frankly I'm not buying what you're saying for one reason. This is all about upstreaming and downstreaming as part of Blue Ocean or disruption or whatever, and Nintendo has always been one step ahead of the curve. If they don't have an FPS-ish game to bring in the fold, then I don't think it's "non-traditional gamers" primarily purchasing this. Is it really hard to believe that 470K "core" gamers on the Wii purchased COD: WaW? It seems that with 45 million sold, maybe a few FPS fans slipped in there somewhere. Even if it does happen to reach 2 million somehow, I don't see how that supports it being picked up by the non-traditional crowd.








