Soundwave on 08 June 2017
| bigjon said: Going by when they launched next gen not by when they stopped supporting it. NES 6 years 85-91 SNES 5 years 91-96 (tech was evolving way more rapidly in that period) N64 5 years 96 to 2001 Gamecube 5 years 2001 to 2006 Wii 6 years 2006 to 2012 WiiU 5 years 2012-2017 (really 4.5, fall launch for WiiU, early spring launch for Switch) So basically every Nintendo console has gotten about 5 years min, even the ones with weaker sales (GC and WiiU) Only the 2 consoles that had dominating success(when WiiU launched Wii still had a massive lead over PS360, they had started narrowing the lead at that point, but it was really 2013-14 when PS360 were still selling great and Wii pretty much stopped that they pulled to a respectable distance) got 6 full years before a successor. So that said, basically Shiggy is saying he see Switch possibly being a NES/Wii like success and thus would get 6 years maybe before a successor. Nintendo has been remarkable consistent with this. Unlike MS which gave Xbox like 4 years, 360 like 8 years and now is releasing a console that is probably double the power of the XB1 4 years later (even though it is "same gen") |
The difference between 5 and 6 year is immaterial, it's not really worth mentioning.
I think he's speaking of a much larger difference than that. Think 8/9/10 years and more of an ecosystem, not just a singular hardware.
It's not the 80s/90s anymore, every industry eventually changes.







