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the_dengle said:

That depends on the product, and on the specs. For instance, when I'm shopping for a new iPod, there are a few things I need to know about the one I'm buying: memory, battery life, processing speed is nice if I'm thinking about using it as a mobile web browser. There are also specs I don't care about, such as the ins-and-outs of the camera. It has a camera, and that's pretty cool I guess, but I don't care enough about it to let that affect my decision.

The Wii U is more powerful than the PS3, but less powerful than a couple of imaginary consoles that don't exist yet. I don't need to know the size, shape, and color of every part inside the Wii U. It's a game console; it's going to play all of the games sold in Wii U packaging. That much is clear. Its features, not specs, are pretty important. I don't care what's going on under the hood to make those features work. I didn't know the specs of the Sega Genesis when I was 5 (no, I didn't even know it had blast processing), I didn't know the specs of the N64 when I was 8, I didn't know the specs of the GameCube when I was 12, I didn't know the specs of the Wii when I was 16, and yet somehow I was able to enjoy playing games on those consoles.

You don't know that. We have no specs, so there is no way for you to prove it. Right now its just wishful thinking or trusting some of these 3rd party devs.

Sorry I wasn't here for the thread, I made this thread and went to sleep.