Nintendo Launches Wi-Fi Campaign for DS 79
The Inquirer has the word that Nintendo has launched a massive theatre-based advertising blitz for the DS. The campaign launch features a trailer length film entitled "The Sad, Agonizing Tale of Bhuvan Ganguly". From the IGN Story: "'There is a great element of surprise to this ad,' says Nintendo's advertising manager Kelli Koenig. 'The spot opens on a very dramatic situation that you just wouldn't expect to be related to video games or Nintendo. The spot clearly demonstrates Wi-Fi as it relates to the Nintendo brand with a nod to Mario Kart DS and it does this in a magical, clearly ownable by Nintendo kind of way.'"
Wrong Timing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wrong Timing (Score:2, Informative)
What movie came out last summer?
The Passion of the Christ.
So people who don't usually watch movies, watched that one, and made last summer a REALLY big one.
http://money.cnn.com/2005/06/16/news/newsmakers/b
Re:Wrong Timing (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Wrong Timing (Score:2, Informative)
That's nice, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:1)
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
They wait till Fall.
It appears as though Mario Kart will be the kick-off title for this. It doesn't come out till Nov. 7, that means 3 months before you will even be able to use this. Why spend the 30 seconds explaining something can't use right away, or even all that soon. Instead the teaser works perfectly to get buzz about it out in the public. Potentially tipping the casual gamer deciding between a PSP or a DS to purchase the DS, cause soon they will be able to play Mario Kart wirelessly.
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:2)
October 18, 2005 Tony Hawk DS
November 7, 2005 Mario Kart DS
November 21, 2005 Animal Crossing DS
Mario Kart is really going to kick it off, Tony Hawk will almost certainly be less popular.
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:1)
Of course, it's entirely possible that Tony Hawk will be delayed a bit. It doesn't seem very Nintendo-like to let a third-party game be the focal point of a new feature.
In other news:
In IGN's August 1 mailbag, [ign.com] C
Re:That's nice, but... (Score:1, Informative)
My opinion? (Score:3, Insightful)
It reminds me of the movie "Alone in the Dark" if you've seen it, you may understand why:
Alone in the Dark opens with a long text crawl explaining the movie (because Uwe Boll is an idiot, but that's not the point). They added it because nobody in the test audiences knew what the fuck the was happening in the movie.
If you have to go back and say "Oh, this is what's going on" or "This is what we're selling" you should probably re-think what you're doing.
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
Re:My opinion? (Score:3, Interesting)
This commercial makes you think that throwing things on the ground causes car accidents miles away.
But it's most likely just a generic commercial. There are many generic commercials that show nothing specific (think "people gathering", "pastoralic view of mountains", etc) and then sold to companies who just add their logo.
I've already seen specific commercials used by more than one company (in different countries tho) to advertise different things.
not generic at all (Score:1, Insightful)
and the fact that the guy throwing the bananna and the guy driving the car are miles apart is meant to highlight the wireless connection feature. you can play/affect other p
Re:not generic at all (Score:2)
Re:not generic at all (Score:1)
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
We actually laughed when the 12
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
You just have to have a DS and a wireless hotspot to connect to.
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
Not that I'd expect there to be too many Friends fans around here, but I really liked Chandlers approach to advertising..."Socks. They go on your feet" or "Pants. They're like shorts, but longer." Would it hurt people to be that obvious sometimes?
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
Yes. People don't like ads, unless they are attracted by sex, action, humor, or in this case, mystery.
The faster a viewer can learn what the ad is for, the quicker he can tune it out because he doesn't care. By concealing the product for as long as possible, the advertiser maximizes total time spent paying attention. Many of the most famous ad campaigns have used this technique, including 1984, Infiniti, and the recent Geico ones.
Re:My opinion? (Score:3, Informative)
Making people curious (as you seem to be ; as am I) is also one goal in today's marketing, and they apparently succeeded in it
And yes, I laughed out loud when Alone in the Dark started with that amateurish text scrolling at the start.
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
The advert does exactly what you ask; it doesn't explain itself.
But it *IS* selling bananas and old guys with carts, and some kind of weird
interaction between something happening on one side of the world and the other.
It just so happens that Mario (old guy) Kart (uhh..) which has a very banana
skidding thing going on with it, will be wireless, which is.. well.. there you
go.
No scrolling text saying "by the way this is a nod to Mario Kart", it's very
subtle and artistic but the target
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
You can't be "artistic" when you're selling things to a culture based around ADD.
Re:My opinion? (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess you aren't the target market, but that doesn't make you right. Being
weird and artistic (rather than loud, obnoxious, brash and right to the point)
is odd and eye-catching.
The first thing you do is wonder why this guy is pushing the cart. And he eats a
banana.. and you wonder what is coming next. That's the whole point. Explaining
the movie at the beginning is ADD culture in action; listening to focus groups
and so on. Here's a hint; maybe this advert will be on at March Of The Penguins.
I think Nintendo are trying to hit up a little more mature an audience here, the
discerning geek or Nintendo-fan, and not the 11 year old.
Either way if you aren't a hyperactive junky who is munching his hotdog and
popcorn a good 22 minutes before the movie starts, you might be interested. In
fact the people who DO pay attention and ARE interested are more readily going to
be the kind of people who play games because they have staying power and attention
spans; they're very similar to the Japanese gamer ethic, that "hardcore RPG gamer"
who will sit and play Pokemon through 10 times until they get every damn animal,
patiently.
They're not going to be sitting there, fiddling the stylus for 10 minutes then
throwing the DS across the room and buying a PSP because they are irrationally
bored of it.
You understand or did I go on too long? Hey, look at me when I'm talking to you
Neko
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away...
Re:My opinion? (Score:1)
It's not needed because most don't have trouble following the basic plot of Star Wars
Re:My opinion? (Score:2)
I'm sure you're a good engineer. You're thinking straight, and you want rational ads which explain products so you can make decisions about them.
Unfortunately, that makes you a crappy advertiser.
Ads are about emotion. Let's face it, most products we buy are very similar to other products in the same category. Nike's shoes aren't better or worse than Puma's. Chiquita's bananas taste the same as Del Monte's. Toyota's cars are bound by the same speed limits as Porsches. People don't buy Nike's shoes because
Just what we need (Score:2, Informative)
Nothing like wasting your customers time (up to 20 minutes) to get them to come back for more.
I hate the arrogance and huberis of making someone spend a punishing amount of time just to get the "privalage" of spending their hard earned money.
Re:Just what we need (Score:2)
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
Usually "The 20" and other non-trailer commercials are shown prior to the posted start time, so they're only replacing the ad slide show or blank screen that theaters used to have before the trailer reel. So if you get there on time, you don't have to sit through the extra ads.
Even better, show up 20 minutes late and you can skip the trailers, too!
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
Re:Just what we need (Score:2)
So my policy is that I don't go go theaters that show commercials. If I go to a new theater I ask them at
Re:Just what we need (Score:2)
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
Just show up later. You know you have a 15 minute+ buffer of ads before showtime now a days.
Re:Just what we need (Score:2)
If they keep it uncertain, you'd be sure to be in the theater on time, for the off chance they start the movie at the published time.
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
Re:Just what we need (Score:3, Insightful)
Additionally, this gives me an extra 10 minutes to get to the movie. Occasionally I will decide to go to a movie shortly before it starts. Sometimes, I won't always make it there exactly when the movie is going to start, but that
Re:Just what we need (Score:2)
Bah. They should lock people like you out of theatres. Once the lights go down I shouldn't have to listen to your late-ass trying to find a seat.
I used to live by a theatre that started the MOVIE at the posted time. Previews and adds
I can not wait till this comes out! (Score:1)
Re:I can not wait till this comes out! (Score:1)
I think that this is kind of the statement I'm hearing all around from anyone who follows these two devices. I actually own a PSP myself but most of my gaming friends are fans of the DS. I think that the DS offers a really good dorm-room environment - it has a lot of excellent games that are fun to play with your friends off of a single hot-spot. On the other hand, I think the PSP offers the user a better individual experience
Here it is: (Score:2, Informative)
This campaign isn't too bad of an idea so far. The ad is a little obscure, but the launch of the WiFi network is still two or three months away. Something like this may pique the interest of fans, but it will be explained in more detail closer to the holidays. Besides, if the launch of Nintendo WiFi Connection is as successful as many people expect, news should spread rather quickly by word of mouth. I know a lot of people who ar
Nintendo's Campaign (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't steal Wi-Fi: watch the SSID. (Score:3, Interesting)
If the advertised SSID is "nintendo" (i.e. at a Nintendo official hotspot) or the like, or if the player has previously used this SSID for a game, put a green light. If the advertised SSID is "linksys" or some other well-known default brand name, put a red light. Otherwise, put a yellow light.
"I'm color-blind, you insensitive clod!" Even color-blind people know from experience that stop comes first and go comes last in a traffic signal.
Since it's on the Games page at Slashdot anyway... (Score:4, Informative)
"The wait for Wi-Fi is nearly over. And if you're wondering if it has been worth the wait, consider this: In a few months, you'll enter a cafe in your home town, plop down with a cup of joe, fire up your DS and challenge a group of friends across town or strangers scattered across the globe to a friendly Mario Kart DS race."
Sift through the marketspeak and, to me, it seems to indicate that Wi-Fi will begin rolling out by having hotspots in public venues, probably through arrangements between Nintendo and those venues. I think there's real potential in that kind of play, making it into a kind of quasi-arcade experience -- it drags portable gaming out of the living room and basement and out into public, which could turn out really cool. Think about it -- videogaming originated, as a mass-market phenomonon, in arcades, where you had spectators and a ready environment to talk games with people you never met. This could go a long way towards reviving gaming in a social context. (It could also crash and burn, but I'm so happy to see Nintendo trying something really risky for a change.)
A little further along, the article talks about Wi-Fi on Revolution, seeming to imply that eventually it'll be available at home.
And that's about it; one page on the tail end of three on the new DS Mario Kart.
Re:Since it's on the Games page at Slashdot anyway (Score:1)
The infrastructure Nintendo will provide will be more geared towards the game servers themselves and there is also talk about them releasing a wireless router of sorts that people like my parents that have broadband but only one computer with no wireless router can just
Re:Since it's on the Games page at Slashdot anyway (Score:2)
Well since you ask...
I figure (okay, guess) what Nintendo will probably do is offer some kind of proprietary access point hardware, first to those installations they partner with, then roll it out nationwide. It'll probably use a standard internet connection, but the wireless part will likely be encrypted by their hardware.
This way, even though they don't make money off of access to their servers they still earn some cash, from access po
Re:Since it's on the Games page at Slashdot anyway (Score:1)
Well, they will in Japan. [slashdot.org] It's probably much less practical in the US, due to the smaller population density. The best implementation would be as you suggested, to use standard WiFi hotspots. But if, for some reason, the DS requires a proprietary protocol, the only solution would be for Nintendo to place their own hotspots or provide users with a USB dongle that lets them use "NiFi" over an existing connection.
"...there is also tal
Re:Since it's on the Games page at Slashdot anyway (Score:1, Informative)
And suddenly playing online becomes... great! (Score:2)
Re:And suddenly playing online becomes... great! (Score:1)
When you want to play a game and then realize you need to download the latest massive patch, then spend time trying to find people to play against, then finally connect and realize most are using cheats/exploits or are just the usual immature pain-in-the-behinds.
I tend to really get aggrivated playing any genre of game online. It basically all boils down to the same degenerative crap...
Re:And suddenly playing online becomes... great! (Score:1)
Also, online gaming is not unique to the xbox OR the ps2 and you are not special because you have xbox live.
I personally think Nintendo did the right thing as far as business decisions go.
Sony's online gaming isn't exactly taking over the worl
Meh... (Score:2)
Online gaming is still crap. I'll make an exception for Mario Kart and Animal Crossing, though :-)
Just kidding. Hopefully, this will get more people to play online. And hopefully, it won't just be an excuse for crappy AI in Mario Kart.
This will definitely changed the rules of... (Score:1)
Two things work in its favor: the stylus (Which allows for at least a few RTS style games. Imagine versing your friend in a game of Pikmin on the DS)and the mic (Hey, you could talk to people real time through the DS).
If anything, this might spark a golden age of handheld innovation.
Re:What other games? (Score:1)
Re:What other games? (Score:1)