Lawlight said: 70%? I don't think that's right. |
But it was right ^^
Lawlight said: 70%? I don't think that's right. |
But it was right ^^
EricFabian said:
|
No, it was 55%.
Was it really 70%? What is the actual fuck people! Are people really that excited to play Flappy Mario?
PC Specs: CPU: 7800X3D || GPU: Strix 4090 || RAM: 32GB DDR5 6000 || Main SSD: WD 2TB SN850
I will tell you EXACTLY why I am VERY upset. I was really thinking about buying NTDOY ADR stock if it went below $12/share again. Needless to say, I missed the boat. Reminds me of when I thought of buying TSLA when it was $20/share, CMG when it was $110/share and AMZN when it was $60/share....I need to just start pulling the trigger.
My guess is some fans are afraid how this can potentially affect the way Nintendo ultimately does business as far as software goes. In other words, afraid of drastic change.
Evidently, at least in the present time, this looks like a good business decision.
e=mc^2
Gaming on: PS4 Pro, Switch, SNES Mini, Wii U, PC (i5-7400, GTX 1060)
justiceiro said:
Yes, i agree with this. Fans are just worried that those changes doesn't mean good thing for us, necessarily. |
They will not loosen the reigns - Iwata has confirmed that. Their ip is too precious to do that.
No reason why fans should be upset.
If so, they don't realize that increased valuation of Nintendo shares means more resources to sustain all those games they value so much on Nintendo hardware that a significant portion of the consumer base is not playing (see Wii U sales).
Presumably, expanding into the one viable market Nintendo hasn't tapped will increase the consumer base for all its IPs. This is not to say that there will be some sort of massive conversion rate as mobile gamers buy Nintendo handhelds or consoles, but it will mean increased revenue sources from an untapped market.
This takes nothing away from Nintendo's core toy business and we will still see the same level of support for both handheld and console platforms.
The only thing that should upset Nintendo fans would be if their new mobile strategy proves so impossibly successful that Nintendo shifts its focus to mobile games over their own hardware based games. I don't see this happening any time soon.
kowenicki said:
|
I don't blame them. The profit taking started yesterday, and with the huge increase it saw it was bound to fall more today from investors taking those 70 percent gains and run away as quick as possible.