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NES said:
NightstrikerX said:
NES said:
Majin-Tenshinhan said:
NES said:
Majin-Tenshinhan said:
I still think Wii Music looks like loads of fun, so I'm happy it's sold well.

 

"Looks" and "is" are two different things.

Oh, so you've actually played it and hate it? Cool.

 

I played it at gamestop. Its a terrible game.

So you're basing your opinion upon what, at most 15 minutes of playtime at a gamestop? I'm sure that's very credible. I own the game and I enjoy it very much, it's one of the few games of which whenever I see someone else playing it, I have this enourmous urge to join them. I don't know why, but it's a fun game to experiment with in single player, and a blast to butcher, or attempt to recreate amazing songs with multiple people.

 




Wii Music
 
4.2
based on 43 reviews
Read critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
based on 77 votes
Read user comments
Rate this game

 

Looks like i have a lot more people on my side. 43 professional reviewers, 77 users, and the rest of the internet.

 

 And yet....2.5 million people thought the game was good enough to buy....looks like he has more people on his side.



"Pier was a chef, a gifted and respected chef who made millions selling his dishes to the residents of New York City and Boston, he even had a famous jingle playing in those cities that everyone knew by heart. He also had a restaurant in Los Angeles, but not expecting LA to have such a massive population he only used his name on that restaurant and left it to his least capable and cheapest chefs. While his New York restaurant sold kobe beef for $100 and his Boston restaurant sold lobster for $50, his LA restaurant sold cheap hotdogs for $30. Initially these hot dogs sold fairly well because residents of los angeles were starving for good food and hoped that the famous name would denote a high quality, but most were disappointed with what they ate. Seeing the success of his cheap hot dogs in LA, Pier thought "why bother giving Los Angeles quality meats when I can oversell them on cheap hotdogs forever, and since I don't care about the product anyways, why bother advertising them? So Pier continued to only sell cheap hotdogs in LA and was surprised to see that they no longer sold. Pier's conclusion? Residents of Los Angeles don't like food."

"The so-called "hardcore" gamer is a marketing brainwashed, innovation shunting, self-righteous idiot who pays videogame makers far too much money than what is delivered."