By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
pezus said:
Aielyn said:
pezus said:
"The answer is fairly straightforward - leaks tend to derive from development kit and SDK documentation and, as we understand it, this crucial information simply wasn't available in Nintendo's papers, with developers essentially left to their own devices to figure out the performance level of the hardware."

That's a great job, Nintendo. Well done

Why would you trust the claim of the article, given the general tone of the article itself? It seems to me that you should be taking it all with a grain of salt, given that we already know that the article is making a number of false claims, like the claim that people know the specs of the Wii U now.

This is one statement that is not hard to believe at all, given Nintendo's previous history with 3rd parties.

But if it were true, third party developers, especially the smaller ones that would most need that information, would have been publicly bitching and moaning over the lack of required information.