| nuckles87 said: I think people weary of how Switch will fair after the release of the next gen are missing a few key things: Many developers will be eager to move on to the next generation, but I think most publishers will put a leash on that, especially given the development costs that come with increased graphical fidelity. Outside of the first party publishers, economics will almost certainly slow down the transition. If these consoles are expensive as rumored, that’ll slow adoption from consumers, and third parties aren’t going to be enthusiastic about moving away from a console install base that collectively surpasses 200 million, to cater exclusively to a userbase that’ll be a fraction the size for it’s first few years and way more expensive to develop for. |
That's not really true. Sure in the first year we will probably see a year of cross-platform titles. However, looking at current gen we already had AC Unity skipping ps3/360 in 2014 and in 2015 almost all major titles from the big publishers skipped last gen consoles like: Batman AK, Fallout4, Witcher3, MK X, Just Cause 3, Wolfenstein etc.
Obviously when the next gen consoles hit the market it will take away some interest from the Switch as people just love the newest toy. Also, like I said the Switch is currently a pretty powerful handheld that, while not as powerful as current gen consoles, still can run most of the AAA multiplatform games. Next gen that difference will be a lot bigger and Nintendo probably will need to launch a more powerful successor to get any support.
But that's the thing. If Nintendo wants to stay on the handheld path, it will probably be 3 or 4 years into the next gen console cycle before they can launch a handheld that comes close to these next gen specs. By then, the ps5 especially, will already have like a 60m lead. And while the next gen Switch will no doubt sell great when it does eventually launch, it will never be able to catch up.







