Agente42 said:
Otter said:
A difference is that what Nintendo inherently does well, works globally. They haven't specifically had to tailor it or open new studios just to appease the West or vise versa. The only big Playstation IP sony have produced in Japan is GT, otherwise they've always been reliant on 3rd parties (Square Enix, Capcom etc). They have plenty of Genre diversity from 1st party output, but nothing that has quite clicked with the Japanese market in the last decade apart from Ghost of Tsushima, and to a lessor extent Demon Souls/Dark Souls. And unlike Nintendo, Sonys commercial strength lay in more "Mature" games developed by the western arm which will struggle for a legal release in a place like China, where as Nintendo's commercial strength lays in more approachable, inoffensive titles like Mario.
We've seen with all of the big 3, that its actually very hard to shift gears. Its taken a long time for MS to try to leverage their 1st party again Sony, or for Nintendo to find its foot in HD developement... When sony tried to copy Nintendo back around 09/10, all the games flopped (Move/Playstation All stars/LBP Karting) So if there were any software developments happening on Sonys side I wouldn't expect it over night, they've learned to mostly stay in their lane. And up until 2017 they were the dominant home console in every market.
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Sony tries to copy the best games Nintendo makes with the B team. This is a problem, when Nintendo products our games, put the best team to do it. Sony believes in casual myth and tries to copy with the B/C team. The best sony team development is the usual action cinematographs game only. Nintendo takes a great team to produce Wii Sports, Animal Crossing, Nintendogs, Mario Kart, etc. |
Well back in the PS3 era, yes. But that relates to the issue, their A teams were already working on IPs which have brought them great success. Just the same way Nintendo doesn't try to compete with Uncharted or create their own Halo, Sony has taken to their comfort zone too and learned to focus on what they do well.