Monteblanco said:
Right in the point. Accessibility is what made the Wii a success. My mother, that bugged me for years about video and computer games got one and I had a lot of fun playing Wii Sports last week. She wouldn't try to play a PS3 game and I don't think she would be good enough to enjoy it. Most people don't invest sufficient time to find a dual stick controller something actually natural to playing. Actually, after playing the Wii for a while, I tried MGS: Twin Snakes and I was shocked as how clumsy the controls are. Many games developed to the PS3 make use of most of the 14 buttons available. It doesn't matter how good is the tutorial, this is complicated. I suspect the reason some well know franchises failed in the Wii is because the developer refused to re-design the interface focusing in accessibility. Take Call of Duty, for example. Modern Warfare uses most buttons in the Wii remote and nunchuck, but many of them could be removed if they were more thoughtful. Why grenades and special attacks not in the weapon cycling buttons, for example? Nintendo games are great sellers because they are accessible. New Super Mario Bros. is actually very hard but the controls are simple and most people can understand what's going on. That's why many non gamers can have fun with it. The Wii series games are all based in intuitive controls, reason why they are good sellers among the expanded audience. All this and an affordable price made the Wii the leader this generation. |
Agreed 100%, all though I do not particularly like the Wii Series, but your reasoning is right. The less complex games are the ones that are dominating the marketplace right now. I think a lot of gamers have a tough time explaining the Wii's success as it isn't due to their definition of, "quality software." For example, the PS2 clearly had the most quality software, and the PS1 had quality software no doubt about it. So did the SNES. And the NES. And, come to think about it, the Wii has quality software, just not in the eyes of hardcore gamers that are not Nintendo fans. So, in a way, nothing has changed.
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