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Licence said:
Soundwave said:
Frequency said:
its not as hard to predict because of the staggered launches, the hardware numbers will maintain a fairly high peak up to, and beyond japanese launch because demand has outstripped supply, with many people preordering not getting their units till late december/early jan, at the same time theres a barrage of decent games from jan to august, without adding any other unannounced stuff to it.

WiiU relies on first party, that support isnt there. Xbox One and PS4 live off of both first and third party, so its much harder to experience a cold stretch.

That isnt to say it will sell astronomically forever, but the launches alone are enough to create an install base for these platforms that outstrips the WiiU's, in a much shorter time, and the costumers of these platforms have, and will continue to purchase games even if they are third party, which nintendo owners have, with little diversion from the rule, shown they will not do.

If nintendo had the manpower to deliver blow after blow, hit after hit, or had third party support and third parties had the support of paying customers, we wouldnt be having this discussion.


That and the target demographic of the PS4/X1 is far more predictable. We know there's a market of about 150-170 million worldwide units of a "hardcore" game console. We know those hardcore gamers aren't going to play PS3/360 forever and will have to upgrade at some point. 

Nintendo's model was more unpredictable, relying on gameplay concepts that people hadn't experienced before like Wii Sports. The problem is this formula is much harder to repeat. 

Casual gamers don't need a game console. Their entertainment life isn't dependant on it. They can have just as much fun playing Candy Crush as Wii Sports Club. 

That's one of the problems for Nintendo. 

Sony/MS' audience has come through for them, whereas the casual audience has burned Nintendo. 


It is true that Nintendo's market has deserted them so far, but we have no evidence yet that the same is not true of Sony and MS. The proof is in the pudding, as the Americans say. I'm waiting till after Christmas before making grand statements on what went wrong with what.

It's not true of Sony/MS because teenage boys-early college aged guys will always love video games. At least for another 5-7 years anyway. 

It's a much more reliable market. 

In part actually Nintendo does Sony/MS a favor by bringing in so many young kids into gaming. But the kid who got a Wii at age 7 ... he may be 13 now. Take a wild guess what console alligns with his tastes nowadays? "Ohmygawdmom stop embarrassing me I'm playing Calladoooty with my buds" phase kicks in like clock work when kids get to junior high. That's where Nintendo loses a lot of kids.