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curl-6 said:
At least they threw us a bone as reassurance that they're not giving up on dedicated hardware.

They had already announced last year that a new system was in development. 

Anyway, this is how Nintendo has typically done things for the last few system cycles. Usually between 1-2 years after a console releases, they announce that a successor console is in the works. Then the following year, they give the console a code name, meaning they've got the basic concept of what they wanted. Then the following year, tech demos are shown off. Then the year after that, the system is released. Given that this pattern has continued up to this point, w'll most likely see the Wii U's successor released in late 2017 at the earliest.



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