curl-6 said:
Unless you're a developer who's worked with the Wii U hardware, (and how could you prove it if you are?) your opinion that it's not powerful isn't going to change many people's minds. Of course rushed launch games made with crappy devkits will look bad. That doesn't mean the system is weak. Look at the PS3's early games. 1. You've forgotten what this point was even about. It was about people relating to a touchpad. In today's world, people can. They are commonplace. 2. Why buy a second TV when you already have one? Many people in this economy could afford a second TV if they wanted but don't see the point. Being able to play off screen is a valuable and convenient feature, I can just switch to the pad mid game, and still share the couch with my girlfriend. 3. 450 pounds for PC that equals PS4? Sorry, I'm going to call BS on that. 4. Motion controls did add depth. They changed the fundamental way people interact with their games, that's more significant than some relatively minor feature like differing cover mechanics or a 2 weapon limit. Being able to interact with a virtual world with your own bodily movements was the biggest step in gaming since the shift from 2D to 3D. All major games do not opt for non-motion controls. Many Wii U and 360 games feature motion, not to mention many Wii games still selling. 5. Nintendoland, ZombiU, and Rayman Origins give us some good ideas on what can be done with it. Then there's the potential for 6-player local splitscreen. |
Or I have a degree in the relevant field and know exactly what those figures mean... What do you have?
1. Yes, common place thus it isn't new, fancy, or going to add anything. It does not cause the same buzz as motion controls.
2. To have one in your room? To have one with your PC? Also seeing that tablets can stream TV shows, this also makes that feature usless. If you can't afford a second scree or tablet, how can you afford a console with games? It's a contradictory target market.
3. Yes, now go use ebuyer and stop commenting on things you clealry don't know anything about.
4. No it isn't. It broke immersion and was an over glorified eyetoy. As I said a million times before, it added nothing to the actual game. You couldn't do things you were unable to do before. Take WiiSport and GoW. WiiSport was not immersive, and fun for about 2 hours. GoW was very immersive and the cover system added to that.If motion controls was such a massive jump, why are they not compulsory anymore? Why are we keeping pads? They only work with something like the Oculus Rift, otherwise they are a waste of time. Oh, and the games feature them as a side function, not a necessity unless it is a specific kinetic party game or wii party game.
5. And their ideas are so good few people are buying the WiiU. Wait what? And 6 player local splitscreen? Who cares. I was playing 16 player lan parties on Halo back in 2001 in one room, so how is this an advancement 12 years on?
As I said, the fact that you haven't proved me wrong and this debate still continues, along with the sub 30k sales this week, no one can fairly argue that the PS3 had a worse launch.







