DevilRising said:
I honestly don't know. I've been rather fed up with the overall state of the games industry for many years, certainly this last gen really did it to me. Part of the reason I liked the Wii, even though I also own a PS3, is the fact that it had so many games that were still more focused on gameplay and the gaming experience, and not trying so hard to be big budget "playable movies". One of the reasons I like Nintendo as a company, is that they still maintain a sense of "old school" game design philosophy that I value. Look no further than Super Mario 3D World. I'm the kind of gamer that prefers 2D gaming to 3D, and sprites to polygons, anyway. But if I'm going to play 3D games, those are the kind of 3D games that I want to be playing. That doesn't mean I haven't had fun with big "open world" romps like Skyrim (even with all it's goddamn bugs), or certain more linear, story driven games. But by and large I don't prefer them. I love a game to have a good story to tell, but not at the expense of gameplay that's actually fun to be playing. If that even did happen, which it won't, it wouldn't be on PS4 most likely anyways. They're not going to abandon ship after one year. They likely wouldn't after 2-3 years. But to answer your question, "Would I play Nintendo games on a Sony console", if that WERE to happen? I don't know. There's always the chance. But if Nintendo dropped out of the console business, I might just give up on mainstream gaming altogether, and just stick with smaller indie titles, get a "Steambox" or something along those lines (NOT Ouya, I've tried it, it's garbage). |
I would want Nintendo to keep making handhelds but their hardware gets in the way of the software. Obviously the network and power of the system get in the way but I HATED when they tried to force motion. Why do I need to fly with the damn motion controls in Zelda when the lag and accuracy just make an otherwise AMAZING game annoying? Why do I have to roll with a waggle instead of just pressing a button to make DK do it? They try to justify their software with the hardware yet their software speaks for itself.








