| BenKenobi88 said: Very nice. Obviously a lot of Wii fans in the forums, but it's not as skewed as I thought. I find it interesting that a majority of the most wanted Wii games are from third party developers, whereas Sony's most wanted games are almost all Sony-published. Perhaps when some more of these big Wii third party games come out, the "mini-game" argument will die down... |
#1 - Super Mario Galaxy (Wii, 54votes)
#2 - Metroid Prime 3: Corruption (Wii, 44 votes)
#3 - Super Smash Bros Brawl (Wii, 42 votes)
#8 - FF:CC (Wii, 15 votes)
#11 - Resident Evil:UC (Wii, 12 votes)
#13 - No More Heroes (Wii, 10 votes)
#14 - Fire Emblem (Wii, 9 votes)
#16 - Super Paper Mario (Wii, 8 votes)
#16 - NiGHTS (Wii, 8 votes)
#18 - Resident Evil#4 Wii (Wii, 7 votes)
#18 - Dragon Quest: Swords (Wii, 7 votes)
Wii - 11 titles, total 216 votes (58%)
Hum...I guess you are right about the majority not being Nintendo, but the top 3, are Nintendo, Super Paper Mario probably won't sell more than Paper Mario 2 (less than 2 mil worldwide), RE4 is the third release of the same game (2nd for extra content), Fire Emblem is published by Nintendo, and CC and Swords and UC are all spinoffs (1 made for kids). So, 5 out of 11 are Nintendo. I think the poll definitely shows the Wii bias in the forums, though. I think the third party games are listed because you have to pick some after the top 3 nintendo games.
157 votes for Nintendo versus 59 vote third party games (73%). That's hardly a great sign for third party titles.
But like I said, the main thing I think is the Wii bias. I was surprised by the lack of 360 support when compared to the PS3, though. Hopefully at least that's an indicator of some sort (personal bias, obviously). There is no way those top 3 outsell Halo or GTA4, so calling this thread "most to be purchased) is a bit off, heh.
All that said, great job shams. Much better than those elimination game threads that imo should be locked because whoever posts more will get their favorite game up there. What's the point? But I digress...







