| Nautilus said: But if you do both it could also mean that it can be both.That argument go both ways. The PS4 excuse is a bad example, simply because the PS4 wasnt designed from the start to be portable as an handheld.I think a better example as to how Switch is a hybrid console, due to it being designed from the start to be so, is the example you gave comparing the PS camera for the PS 2 and the Wii.Yes, if you bought all the extra components and acessories, the PS2 could also have motion controls for very specific games, but the PS2 wasnt designed around that.In other words, if you bought the base model, it was just a traditional console.The Wii in the other hand, it was a motion control based system from the get-go, with all games potentially having those type of controls if the developer put them in.It was designed that way.Same with Vita and VitaTV.Thats why, even if you transport a PS4 from one place to the other, it will still be a home console, while the Switch is a hybrid.It is pretty obvious. Again, the third paragraph is simply answered by my first paragraph.Just because it has a screen to it, dosent mean its primerely a handheld.The same way that just because the Wii dont have tradicional controllers, it dosent mean it isnt a home console.Tecnology evolves, and what we might have considered yesterday features essentials for a phone, for example, can have totally different functions tomorrow, even if it retains the basic functions of what a phone is supposed to be.The same works for consoles.I mean, back to your weak controller argument, back in the 80s the "traditional controller" was completely diferrent of what we see as a controller nowadays, yet we call the same thing.Plus the regular controler for the Switch is the joy-cons, which can turn into a more regular looking controller, which is another point that makes your argument moot. And as for the carts, really?Physical media is what defines a console?For your information, outside of price, carts are superior to discs in every way.Or most anyway.Plus, in the past regular physical media was guess what?Carts.So yeah.... In the end, the obvious design is a hybrid system, wether you like to admit it or not.It was designed that way.It is being marketed that way.I dont know how on earth you can read that message any other way. |
It can do both. But its more of one thing than it is the other. and thats evident in its design language. But lets just agree to disagree instead of going back and forth on it. I feel the switch is a handheld with a home dock. You feel its both. If the switch gets the majority of Home console games that the other platforms get, then it would mean you were right. If it doesn't then I was right. time will tell.
And as for carts..... carts aren't better than discs in the one area that matters to gaming. The one area that there isn't any work around. Data capacity. there is a reason that the switch is going to use 15/16GB carts. at a time when even 50GB isn't big enough to hold all the content on the other HD platforms and these games aren't even being built with native 4k assets right now. when they are that size could very well double.
I don't know how some could be looking at carts as the secomd coming. Been there done that. it's ideal for a handheld device. particularly cause it allows the device be smaller and more durable and at least allows for data transfer speeds that would negate the need for a HDD. But don't make the mistake of thinking it's a better medium for data distribution than a disc. Look at it this way, off the top of your head. make a list of games that would never make it to the switch primarily due to its cart data size limitation.
And this is assuming the hardware can even run those games. But let's say it can. What do you think happens when they have to make specialized carts to hold 40GB+ of data for a game? you think that game will cost more than Its disc based equivalent? who foots the bill? What happens when the game has an 8GB DLC? where does that go? I don't see how you don't see how inhibitive all this is. You know those carts you are championing now? it killed the N64. It made Nintendo lose out to games like FF7 and MGS that were previously Nintendo staples. Ah well, we will see I guess. Maybe I'm just a sceptic.







