| Aerys said: It wont happen, if a very popular console already struggle to reach 60M ( and even 50M if It wasnt for new 3DS) , its highly unlikely that à next handheld will when smartphones have éven more ground now than in 2011, especially à handheld console with paid online !
That plus thé fact it has no real third party support ( much less than WiiU actually) , à lot of Bad press and à Price way too high, it would already bé an Big achievement to pass GameCube in thèse conditions. |
Well, I guess we'll just have to see. The Switch can potentially offer tablet and phone gamers more than the 3DS could have, but at this point it's just too early to tell what Nintendo will eventually do to attract them, if anything. There are still console gamers to appeal to as well. I do think people are making paid online out to be a bigger deal than it is, though. Nintendo is still pushing local multiplayer hard, and the kind of people who play these kinds of games online probably won't be disuaded by a little online fee when it really comes down to it.
| zorg1000 said: Yep, and at the same time they couldnt divert significantly more development resources to Wii U without hurting 3DS so the only thing they could really do was ride it out and try to minimize the damage. 3DS still has a solid year of life, a handful of small-medium Nintendo IP are releasing this year (Yoshi, Mario Sports, Fire Emblem, etc) alongside a few big 3rd party titles (Monster Hunter, Dragon Quest). The best thing for Nintendo to do is let 3DS & Switch coexist for the next 1-1.5 years much like GBA & DS did and as the Switch library increases, the price decreases and a smaller, portable only revision releases, 3DS owners will begin to transition over more and more. |
I've been wondering if Nintendo would release a smaller, cheaper Switch with either mini joy-cons or built-in controls and sell it as a successor to the 3DS. It could potentially even still fit into the dock if they don't mess with the thickness. I'm just not sure what that would do to their branding. One of the biggest selling points of the Switch is the versatility of the joy-cons. Can you even call it a Switch without them?








