Xen said:
Nintendo itself says it's a home console first (even if they presented it as a mobile :D ). It's a pity and a missed opportunity. The dedicated handheld market, even if Nintendo's strength, has shrunk, and is shrinking, anywhere but in Japan. Home consoles however, are quite healthy. The only advantage this approach has is less droughts in games - which, thanks to more ample power were never a problem for consoles such as XBO/PS4 - in fact, consistently, you gotta pick your games so you have time for them. Power parity with them would bring at least SOME games to the plate. How many people are gonna lug around this big and fragile thing with them? I will venture a guess: not many. This works much better for the home, and it misses serving that market by having hardware that will be anemic, even when compared to XBO/PS4. It's sad, but it's exactly what I expected from Nintendo: their own niche thing. |
Yea but dedicated consoles isn't Nintendo's strength. Their strength is in their handhelds which have sold quite well. The 3ds launched with it being priced too high with a 3d thing that didn't work very well. So hopefully, Nintendo has learnt their lesson with the NX and will price it wisely. The great thing about making a handheld is the devs in Japan seems to like them a lot because handhelds sell well in their home country. But if Nintendo went with another console and western developers doesn't make games for it, then they would be screwed because then they wouldn't get support from either.
So at this point, I think they made a good choice if it came down between the two. At least this way, they will get plenty of japanese game support as well as themselves instead of the other route of where they hope for western third party support. We will see how it turns out in the end.
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