ChichiriMuyo said:
I'm sorry, but no. Handhelds simply have a lower attach rate than consoles. This is nothing new. The fact that new games keep getting released should indicate that Nintendo isn't the only company making money off of the DS. As long as there is significant profit, why mess with things? As it is, DSi is already doing a number of things that the DS cannot, and they could very well focus on the system's added capabilities as the user-base grows. The DSi is really as much of a successor as the DS needs at this point. It has more power and can use the cameras for things the DS could not do. DSi could easily be the system that "sold 5 million units without a game" in the way the PS3 could not, and with sales still high and no competition forcing their hands (say a PSP2 or much more powerful iPhone) there's not much reason to launch a new system. Also, does Nintendo really need anything more than that new 3D tech to sell a new Pokemon? Hint: The answer is no, they could sell one with far less effort. But it'd sell millions of DSi units, and Nintendo could basically be launching a new system with far less than the usual costs. Why spend more than they have to in order to launch a successor when they basically already have one? |
the DSi will not see the kind of support a new handheld would it is a small part of the DS userbase and the non DSi userbase is still growing and will continue to unless nintendo stop making DS lites. It is hard to differentiate the DSi in the minds of the average DS owner so retail DSi only games will be a hard sell to consumers and shareholders alike, though just adding functionality to Games that still run on older DS hardware is possible I don't see it as being a major trend and not even nintendo have done it so far, and any features like camera support will just be gimmiks and not be essential to the game. As for attach rate yes traditionally that has been the case but the DS is the highest selling current gen hardware and continues to sell strongly not to mention it has one of the strongest and most diverse software libraries of any console, piracy is a large factor this time round and a new console could help slow that down at least for a while, sell a lot more software and hardware (I doubt it would hurt DS sales that much even with backwards compatibility) well allowing Nintendo to get a foothold into the next gen and establish a new install base and provide new opportunities/capabilities to software developers. The success of the DS is not a reason not to release a new device and I expect to see continued support for the DS.
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