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Forums - Sales - Pidgeon: The idea that Nintendo is bad for third-party publishers is a myth

http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=24695

Wii offers new challenge for third parties, says analyst

'Careless publishers will suffer, as they should'

IDC analyst Billy Pidgeon has warned that while the success of the Wii and DS will have a positive effect on the games industry as a whole, publishers now face a new set of challenges with regard to producing games.

"Nintendo has always had top shelf first party software, and the Nintendo challenge for third party publishers is to produce titles that can compete with Nintendo's games," He told GamesIndustry.biz.

"The Wii and the DS raise the challenge with alternative interfaces, and publishers with titles that are optimised for those interfaces have the best opportunity to leverage the broader installed base for the DS and for the potentially broader base of the Wii."

Pidgeon's comments came in response to those made earlier this week by Todd Mitchell of Kaufman Bros. Equity Research. He said that the success of Nintendo's consoles "bodes poorly" for publishers, arguing that they now find themselves "in a permanent catch-up mode".

But according to Pidgeon, "Nintendo's success in bringing video games to a wider audience is a strong positive for the entire games industry. On a basic level, more gamers means more sales.

"The idea that Nintendo is bad for third-party publishers is a myth with roots in the 8bit -16bit days when Nintendo and Sega manufactured cartridges and the third party publishers felt they got short shrift in the production line," he continued.

"With N64 and GameCube, Nintendo suffered from a lack of third-party support and most of the third party titles that were published on Nintendo's platforms were slapped together ports of games for other systems."

Now, however, things have changed: "That publishers are eager to seize the opportunities is obvious from the strong third-party support and development investment in Nintendo's platform."


Pidgeon went on to observe that the unique features of the Wii and DS should encourage publishers to develop games specifically for the consoles - and put more pressure on them to ensure the titles are of a high quality.

"With mass market platforms also comes the challenge of more software competition. The publishers that are capable of producing competitive titles taking advantage of the Wii and DS interface will do very well," he stated.

"Publishers that provide quick and careless original and licensed titles or shoehorned ports of games designed for other platforms are going to suffer, as they should."
 



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FishyJoe said:

"Publishers that provide quick and careless original and licensed titles or shoehorned ports of games designed for other platforms are going to suffer, as they should."
 

I'm interpreting this to mean all publishers will suffer.



Sounds like almost everything that third parties will shovel err... release on the Wii.



Well if the controls of the DS and Wii, combined with the expense of the PSP, 360, and PS3, make it harder to make shovelware, than this may be a greater gen than any before.



A flashy-first game is awesome when it comes out. A great-first game is awesome forever.

Plus, just for the hell of it: Kelly Brook at the 2008 BAFTAs

As long as developers keep thinking of the Wii like a traditional console, their content won't improve. If they DO get what they're working with, we're gonna be having some serious kickass games. :)



Nobody is crazy enough to accuse me of being sane.

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England said:
Sounds like almost everything that third parties will shovel err... release on the Wii.

hopefully when they'll realize it doesn't need to cost 50 million$ like PS3 games,and that ports and crapwares don't sell well, they'll start adjusting. Your comment is pure bias, just like your other comments kwaad... sad.



sorry double post



An analyst gets it right for once.

3rd party might not be the central star on Nintendo systems but if Nintendo does well they also do well by default because it is the most popular system. All they gotta do is make sure they put out something worth buying. If they're expecting gangbusters from D-team efforts then they shouldn't be surprised.

Nintendo put most of these big time 3rd parties on the freakin' map in the FIRST place. Half of these famed franchises if not from the arcade came on a Nintendo system first.

Nintendo hate slowly fades as the N reclaims its lost throne. Capcom is the strongest 3rd party developer around. Many times when I think of a non-1st party/2nd party mega franchise most of them end up being Capcom's. I was thinking of the DS & what popped into my mind? Phoenix Wright. From where? Capcom.

John Lucas



Words from the Official VGChartz Idiot

WE ARE THE NATION...OF DOMINATION!

 

Third party games dont do very well on Nintendo consoles .Until now ,thats it .



I guess the NES and SNES just didn't exist Diomedes.