How Wii Is Creaming the Competition 377
CNN has a report on the Wii's success in the games marketplace right now, referring to their sales dominance as 'creaming the competition'. The article tries to break down exactly why Nintendo's console has sold so successfully, discussing the system's marketing, engineering, and philosophy. "Next, engineers settled on a new approach for the Wii's looks. Just as the DS shunned the Game Boy name to appeal to a broader audience, the Wii would adopt a sleek white exterior instead of the toylike loud colors used on the GameCube. Even CEO Iwata got involved in the design process; at one point he handed engineers a stack of DVD jewel cases and told them the console should not be much bigger. Why so small? To work with the motion-sensitive wireless controller Nintendo planned, Iwata reasoned, the console would have to sit directly beside the TV. Make it any larger and customers would hesitate to leave it there. " Their sales strategy is working in spades. CVG reports that at least one analyst thinks that Wii demand won't be met until 2009. This past weekend Chris Kohler had an interesting comment on the 'ambassador programs' Nintendo ran in advance of the Wii's launch, and how that might tie in to the system's financial success.
They're outselling them? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:They're outselling them? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Half the price my paw (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Half the price my paw (Score:5, Insightful)
The Wii IS selling at those prices.
PS3's are not selling at a loss.
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In small numbers. The vast majority of the Wiis sold are sold retail. Well, even the ones scalped are sold at retail the first time. Then a small number of them get marked up and sold used. The used (and yes, an unopened product is still no longer new - thus used) market is higher than the new market, but almost all new Wiis are sold for the MSRP.
Re:Half the price my paw (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually it would be 'Less than half' the price of a PS3. Since Sony discontinued the 20 gig model, the Wii is now ~42% of the PS3's price (and it comes with a game).
Re:Half the price my paw (Score:4, Informative)
The PS3 is selling for about $500 each, and has sold 3.16 million units worldwide (according to vgcharts) making back roughly 1.58 billion dollars.
The Wii is selling for about $250 each, and has sold 6.54 million units worldwide (according to vgcharts) making back roughly 1.635 billion dollars.
The 360 is selling for about $400 each, and has sold 9.68 million units worldwide (according to vgcharts) making back roughly 3.872 billion dollars.
Looks like X-Box 360 is creaming the competition currently, in both money recouped in hardware sales (at a lost), and units sold.
Re:Half the price my paw (Score:5, Insightful)
The 360 has been on sale for 18 months
The PS3 and Wii have been on sale for 6 months
The Wii has sold about twice as much as the PS3 in about the same amount of time
The Wii has sold about 2/3 as much as the 360 in about 1/3 of the time.
If nothing dramatic changes the Wii will be the best selling next-gen console by the end of the summer. Of course Halo 3 and GTA 4 could very well kick start the HD console sales in the fall. Either way, Xmas 2007 is when the first real battle of this generation will take place.
Re:Xbox 360 is on shelves. Wii is not. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:So include cab fare instead of scalper surcharg (Score:3, Funny)
Wow. I have read a lot of weird car analogies on slashdot, but nothing quite like this.
Re:They're outselling them? (Score:5, Informative)
The Wii outsold the Xbox 360 by 25% last month. That's certainly a sizable lead, yet it's not exactly what I'd call "creaming the competition". I'd also argue that the Wii's monthly software sales have been underwhelming - Wii Play has been propping up the numbers to a large extent, and that's a $10 game bundled with an accessory.
Now, if you want to talk about getting creamed, let's talk about the PS3...
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Also, the controller wasn't all that comfortable to use, and having the cord coming out on the side facing
Re:They're outselling them? (Score:5, Interesting)
That is not what took place. The Dreamcast sold well but then slumped badly after Sony promised the moon with the PS2. Even if you only look at the sales figures in a vacuum - a drop in hardware sales does not indicate, to me at least, a problem with widespread piracy. If anything, piracy should have helped to move more numbers of consoles.
Re:They're outselling them? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, its hardware sales have honestly been somewhat underwhelming too - despite what the article here would lead you to believe. That stuff about them not meeting demand until 2009? Makes it sound like customers are just clamoring to get their hands on the Wii, when the truth is they sold 259,000 units last month. That's about average for any game console, and only a little better than the Xbox 360, which has systems sitting on store shelves all over the country.
The truth is one of two things: either Nintendo's having major production problems, or they're artificially and intentionally short-supplying for PR purposes. If it's the latter, it appears to be working - for now. Lots of people talk about how Nintendo "can't keep up with demand", which implies that demand is great. But that will only last for so long, as people see the actual monthly sales numbers.
They're doing better than MS or Sony right now, and selling more units, so I'm not saying this is all completely overhyped. But I would argue that any game manufacturer that can't make more than 259,000 units a month - especially one that's as relatively simple as the Wii, and especially one that's been on the market for six months now - has some serious problems. Their inability to meet demand is only good news if that means they're selling a huge number of units, but that's not the case. They're unable to meet demand because their production capacity is much too low, which just means they're leaving potential customers' money on the table and selling a lot fewer units than they should be.
Re:They're outselling them? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, had they produced and shipped more, they might have sold more.
I don't go out every day or call around all of the time, but if I'm in a store that might sell Wii's, I check to see if they have one. I know I want to get my hands on one. Maybe they sold all they produced? If I find one, I'll buy it on the spot, and I bet others are thinking the same thing.
I get the impression that if they could produce more, they would. Of course, I don't know this, but I don't need to think of it as a conspiracy to artifically inflate the price. I'm not even sure that translates into production problems, so much as their capacity isn't near large enough for the apparent demand.
I know I want one. I assume there are others who want them. That could be a simple matter of scarcity of supply.
Why does everything need to be a conspiracy around here?
You would argue that from talking out of your backside, or an actual insight and understanding into their manufacturing process? Seriously, all of the analysts I've read so far don't agree with you. They realize that the demand is high, but they seem to think there are real reasons why they wouldn't be able to keep up with production demand.
Well, if you're selling all you can make, that's good news. They're not really decreasing the number of potential customers -- they're just producing fewer than they could sell if they could produce more. I bet if they could make another 100,000 per month, they'd probably sell those. There is clearly a demand for it. Yes, over time some consumers might say 'bugger it' and forget all about it. Or, people (like me) are really clamouring for the game experience we've heard such lovely things about -- I for one am really looking forward to a change from traditional gaming.
I guess we'll figure out how much demand is out there over the next few months, and more people who wanted them get their hands on them. If demand immediately falls flat at some point, they will have saturated the market and there is no demand. If they keep selling that many consoles for the next several months, then there really is a demand for that many.
Cheers
The reason why Wii sold 259k for March in NA (Score:3, Insightful)
-Sudden production problems!
-Nintendo artificially holding them to drive up demand!
-Nintendo artificially holding them because of the end of the fiscal quarter!
And so on.
But instead of focusing on the NPD numbers, take a step back and examine the GLOBAL sales for the Wii. While shipments of Wii DROPPED in North America during March, is that true for the entire world? No. In fac
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360 = 9.68 million
Wii = 6.54 million
PS3 = 3.16 million
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I don't remember seeing any numbers, but if that's the case... well I'm not impressed at all. The Wii would have to be a real piece of shit not to outsell its competitors if you considerer just how much cheaper it is.
Creaming vs. Getting Creamed (Score:4, Insightful)
I can't believe I'm replying to this, but that's exactly what he was saying... you see, he turned the tense and the subject around. Instead of saying the Wii is creaming its competition, he said the PS3 is getting creamed by its own competition. His point was that the PS3 is getting creamed by XBox/Wii more than Wii is creaming XBox/PS3.
At least, that's how I read it.
PS3 F-ed up, and 360 is too hardcore (Score:3, Insightful)
The Xbox360 marketed itself to "hardcore" gamers who spend all day playing, and has little appeal to casual gamers and the general public at large.
This left 80% of the market open for the Wii to sell to, and they effectively had no competition.
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Most people don't buy consoles till they're near or under $200. That's why the PS2 still sells so strongly.
The Wii is crushing the PS3 and 360 because it's selling closer to the sweet-spot.
When the 360 and PS3 get closer to $250, they'll be moving units like Nintendo too.
(future developments notwithstanding)
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That, and the damn things break so easy. Other than the NES, I've never had a console crap out on me before the PS2 just stopped working. If any system should've stopped, it was the Gamecube, which had the ever-loving hell beat out of it when someone caught the cord and pulled it off the TV... but noo, the barely-used PS2 crapped out.
what, me bitter?
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You're suggesting that for Nintendo to be the "winner", it should need to out-compete itself?
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It's true, though. There's only a finite amount of money that can/will be spent on games, and if people are buying DS games, they can't use that money on Wii games. If people aren't buying Wii games, publishers are less likely to invest in producing new Wii games.
Nintendo still gets paid, but it's harder to establish a new line if sales are being lost to another platform (even your own).
Re: That is Sony's issue in a nutshell. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nintendo still gets paid, but it's harder to establish a new line if sales are being lost to another platform (even your own).
Welcome to Sony's dilema. The PS2 needs to stick around because it's the only thing making them money right now, bu
I'm not buying a WII... (Score:2)
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Re:I'm not buying a WII... (Score:5, Insightful)
You are most likely male, between the ages of 18 and 25. You are not who Nintendo wants to sell these things to. They want to sell to adults, with careers and families, who want to pick up a game to play for 20 minutes -- not hard core gamers. They want to sell to thirtysomethings (like me) who played NES, SNES, Genesis, Turbografix, etc. back in the day, and want to share the games they used to play with their children.
They want people who can pick up a game and have fun for the short amount of free time they have. It's hard to do that with an Xbox or PS* -- it's not fun getting pwned by some 12 year old with nothing better to do with his time than play Halo for 40 hours a week.
It shocks the hell out of me that they were the first ones to realize this market even exists.
Re:I'm not buying a WII... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, I think Microsoft figured it out with solitare and networked checkers, but they just didnt' figure out how to make money at it.
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"I, state your name, am NOT in Nintendo's target demographic."
I get that feeling a lot. The game is fun for the first 20 then I'm left wondering "and now what?"
for instance nintendogs for the DS. Fun for exactly 20 minutes then you find out thats it. No locked features, no extras, just more decoration. Wii Cooking mama.. can't do anything with those points just minigames. Wii Warioware.. minigames. Wii Rayman.. minigames. Wii sports. 20 min then meh. Lotsa of minigames nothing with meat except zelda. thankfully there is more variety in DS titles but my fear is they w
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That's interesting. I've sunk a whole bunch of time -- many, many hours -- into Wii Sports. Bowling especially! The nice thing is, I haven't sunk all that time at once. I've played for a while, done something in real life, come back, and so on. My fiancee and I play Wii Sports together, since it's a great game to play with someone who doesn't have as much video game experience.
Even if you want games that take longer, how about Zelda? Or Super Paper Mario? I think the Wii s
Re:I'm not buying a WII... (Score:4, Interesting)
What he said. I'm still playing Wii Sports to this day, usually 4 or 5 times a week. My bowling skill score keeps fluctuating around 980-1050, and I'm still working how to bowl strikes more consistently to raise it. Anyone who says Wii Sports gets dull after 20 minutes is talking out of their posterior.
And another fun long-playing Wii game that gets overlooked is Excite Truck. It takes a damn long time to S-rank all of the tracks in Mirror Mode (and unlock the final unlockable). Too many folks, however, simply win a few races and mistakenly assume they can "beat" the game in a few hours...
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I get that feeling a lot. The game is fun for the first 20 then I'm left wondering "and now what?"
Fun for exactly 20 minutes then you find out thats it. No locked features, no extras, just more decoration.
I have a life and am busy too but I need a $40+ to entertain me for more then 20min.
Somehow your statements seem to contradict each other. You say that you have a life are that you are busy but you are looking to be entertained for hours? When will you find the time to live that so-called life you claim to have if you are busy playing with your toys?
I also noticed that you are posting on ./ and your user number is two hundred thousand lower than mine.
I might be the market (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I'm not buying a WII... (Score:5, Informative)
We also play casual games on both platforms, but we both prefer the new games (like Boom Boom Rocket, Cloning Clyde, Zuma, etc) on XBLA much more than the old stuff on VC. I think if Nintendo opened the VC up to non-retro titles (maybe even homebrew as MS are planning to do with XNA) it could be pretty cool. Don't get me wrong, I loved paperboy as a kid, but it doesn't really do anything for me anymore.
So big up to Nintendo for selling all these boxes, I wish them well, but once SPM is done (few days now I'd guess) mine will be back gathering dust.
Re: Why is XBLA more casual friendly than VC? (Score:4, Informative)
Which has me baffled. The 360 is much LESS 'casual player' friendly than the Wii, Yet XBLA has much more Casual friendly titles than the VC. I have a Wii60 myself, and While the 360 has networked Hearts, Uno, Poker... Even Pac Man!... come on Nintendo where is the Sudoku game, or Dr. Mario, or Poker, or a 'Crossword Puzzle game' something, anything even universal staples like pacman / frogger would be great.
Personally, I love the classics on the VC, and I'm one of the few people I know who thinks they are fairly priced (IF you don't think Zelda: lttp, Donkey Kong Country or Gunstar heroes are worth $8 each you're crazy.), but what about say, my retired parents?
Nintendo has tapped a broader demographic of casual gamers, but what can they buy? Most of the games out now (at retail, and VC) are still catering to the hardcore...
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I wouldn't say that the 18-25 range isn't part of their demographic, but it's definitely not their focus. After all, how many cruise ships [gofox.com] are installing 360's or PS3's? The 'Wii' is more than just a video game. It's made it's way into pop-culture. That's not to say it's a superior product, but it is a marketers wet-dream when it's on the tip of everyone's tongue.
It's up to Nintendo to jus
Re:I'm not buying a WII... (Score:5, Interesting)
Case in point: I was at my parents house having dinner when my 57 year old mom said "I really like those Nintendo Wiis. I think I'll buy one." My jaw about hit the floor. Here's someone who has never played a video game for more than five minutes in her life talking about dropping $250 on a console. I asked her why she liked it, and she said that it wasn't just sitting in front of a screen, that it would help her stay active. She's worried about osteoporosis and gaining too much weight.
Let me summarize for those who don't get it: A grandmother who is almost sixty wants a Wii. There are at least as many of them in the world as hardcore gamers, mostly because the hardcore gamers live in their basements.
For what it's worth, I'm a 25-year-old male, but not a hardcore gamer. I get about 1 hour a day of downtime, which is split between the Web and TV. I'd like to buy a Wii, but I have to save some money since my wife and I are having a kid in October. So I'm going to stick with my NES I picked up at a yard sale for $20 along with about 80 games. That is, unless they release Guitar Hero 2 for the Wii.
Re:I'm not buying a WII... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nope. You can either do that or you can attract other customers and expand the market. It doesn't matter if the competition is getting the same absolute number of customers they would have anyway, as long as they're still getting relatively much fewer customers than you.
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Halo 5 on my Dreamcast (Score:2)
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On top of its merits... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:On top of its merits... (Score:4, Funny)
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But now it's up to third parties to exploit the console. I personally feel very bored of Zelda and Mario, and I really hope that third parties see the huge potential in this thing and adjust their platform objectives accordingly.
Meaning - bring on the "adult" games, people! It's ridiculous tha
Re:On top of its merits... (Score:5, Insightful)
But now it's up to third parties to exploit the console. I personally feel very bored of Zelda and Mario, and I really hope that third parties see the huge potential in this thing and adjust their platform objectives accordingly.
Meaning - bring on the "adult" games, people! It's ridiculous that so far, only EA has released a decent port of an old game (The Godfather).
The issue is timing. Publishers want to get out to market fast, with a sizeable 'Mature game' but that takes time.
That's why for now we have to be content with: Godfather, Scarface, & RE4 for now, and RE:UC, No more heroes and Manhunt for later.
Say what you will about the Godfather, but I like it. The motion controls make it better, and it's a good looking game (real good by say X-box standards) and it is a very big game. Vice City wasn't created in a day, and it will take some time for these new original properties to get made for the Wii.
Re: On rails = win. (Score:2)
Agreed. As far as the games themselves, I enjoyed the on-rails shooting the best in Rayman. The game was fun, and funny, but I kept going back to that part. I honestly think Red Steel would have worked better as an Arcade Style on rails shooter than a FPS. Had they gone that route instead I'm sure it would have played alot be
I don't know about this.. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:I don't know about this.. (Score:4, Insightful)
If I were the developer of a Wii game that I didn't think was that great, I'd be releasing it ASAP rather than improve it to take advantage of the huge number of consoles relative to the meager offering of games - my game would fit right in with alot of the crap that's out there for the Wii.
I don't think the situation will improve - thanks to the success of the Wii, all the big studios have announced ports of their existing games to the Wii, and it's going to make the Wii look bad - watch for some really bad control-schemes for the wireless controller in upcoming games.
All that said, the Wii is the only console that has a chance of making it in the front door of our house. But that's going to wait till I can find one, and there are some decent games.
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On the other hand, I'm disappointed that the Wii has more green-rated games I want to play than the PS3 does.
The PS3 has 4 beat-em-up games, 3 racing games, 7 sports games. I have zero interest in sports or fighting, and I'm picky about racing games, so right now that leaves the PS3's selection of games very unappealing.
Which goes back to the PS3 being targeted at the hardcore gamer, and the Wii not.
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Although I have to say that Super Paper Mario is a lot of fun. You should try that one out.
Mostly I'm just waiting for Halo 3...
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Second, first thing you do is self identify as owning 2 next-gen consoles owner.
Do you really think you qualify as the broader casual market the Wii is designed to appeal to?
Hint: Those people haven't cranked through the available library yet. They don't care about 'integrated multiplayer' either.
The issues you have with the Wii, aren't going to impact the broader casual gamer crowd.
And as a 'gamer', sure the Wii library isn't going to fill your days
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Compare sports (Score:2)
The only thing I've ever seen in online games is shooting the crap out of each other. How is that fun? How is that interesting? How is that a puzzle? Where's the plot? It's mindless repetition. I don't get it.
The only thing I've ever seen in televised sports is shooting the ball into the hoop[1]. How is that fun? How is that interesting? How is that a puzzle? Where's the plot? It's mindless repetition. I don't get it.
[1] "Hoop" can include the fair quadrant of the audience seating (baseball), the goal (hockey or soccer), the perimeter of the end zone (gridiron football), or the other side's half of the court (lawn tennis).
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Production (Score:3, Interesting)
Nintendo's challenge will be to produce enough units to meet demand without sacrificing quality. They were clearly surprised by the demand, and have been slowly ramping up production. They are at a production volume of 1 million a month, and ramping to 1.5 million / month.
Wiiiii (Score:3, Interesting)
And that analyst should be fired. I think it is much more likely that the Wii will be able to catch up to demand in 3 to 4 months. Right now there are 1000s of Wii consoles up on Ebay. So I feel some of the demand is a bit artificial due to people trying to make a quick buck.
What I find interesting is that the PS2 is outselling the Wii (of course, we don't know if the Wii would outsell the PS2 if it could increase its supply enough..it probably would). I mean, it makes sense because it has the largest library and still has great games coming out for it...but still...I don't remember this happening in the previous previous generation.
Re:Wiiiii (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course there are 1000's of Wii's on ebay. They're there because they are selling.
And because they are selling they don't represent artificial demand. If anything they show there is still significant demand for it above retail price, while accepting ebay hassles and risks. In other words, we haven't even begun to see what sort of demand there will be for the wii from *impulse buyers*.
Most of the Wii's are still being snapped up by pent up demand, by people actively looking for them. They simply aren't on shelves long enough for someone to stroll up and buy one on impulse.
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Re:Wiiiii (Score:4, Interesting)
The PS2 thing is odd; but it may be that buying a PS2 is simply a cheaper option than the PS3 - a lot of the high-profile games I see advertised on TV right now, and sponsoring TV shows, are Playstation 2 games. There's no need for a PS3 unless you want the great HD experience nobody sees the need for yet.
You DID see it in the previous generation though. Right after the Playstation 2 came out, Sony created the PSOne - a curvy, white version of the Playstation original console, with a Dual Shock pad in it. It sold like hotcakes in the face of the hundreds-of-dollars-more Playstation 2, and with 90% of the new games still being Playstation 1 games at the time. Demand did outstrip supply for a couple of weeks.. this was with me working at a games store in my youth. It got annoying for people to ask for a PSOne, because then it was our job to try and sell them a PS2.. a little difficult to get them to justify tripling their outlay just to play some games (people did though
You've seen it in handhelds too; the Gameboy Advance SP sold a lot of units, and when people couldn't get the fliptop model with the integrated battery and the brighter, better screen.. they just went and bought the still readily available and still in-production original Gameboy Advance. I believe they did bring out a new colour of the original Gameboy Advance, before they killed it off in favor of the SP.
And they're still selling the SP even though the DS is the hotcake, and even though it is not intended as a console replacement..
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Maybe Grandma is wary of E-bay, or maybe the prices are too high for a used console.
I think the market for toothbrushes on ebay might be stagnant regardless of market demand.
Because Nintendo and Microsoft work together (Score:5, Insightful)
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Ever heard of 'disruption' technology? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Wii is a classic use of 'disruption' technology. A disruption occurs when a cheaper product introduces new technology to make doing the current job (of what the industrys' products are supposed to do) easier and/or better. The 'disrupted' products end up shriveling up in the marketplace. (Did the DS disrupt the handheld market? Is the
Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
You'd think human centered product design would be a no-brainer, but clearly its harder to do than it sounds. It isn't just getting the details right, its being bold in choosing not to do things. Making shrewd decisions not to do things conventionally thought necesssary characterize the breakthrough designs of the Wii and Palm.
I think the reason that we see so few excellent product designs is that its hard to let go of preconceptions. So much of business runs on swagger.
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Regular marketing won't
why the wii wins? (Score:2, Insightful)
fun, quick games, reasonable price point, and finally doing something NEW has put the Wii on top.
But is it creaming were it counts? (Score:2, Insightful)
Console sales are all very nice and all BUT what counts is the sale of software for that console.
I personally think that it says an awfull lot about the game industry that the top scorer for march was God of War 2 for the PS2.
What then does this tell us? That an ancient console beats EVERY SINGLE current console, handheld and regular, in sales?
Oh and number 2 and 3 in software sales (console) went to the 360.
So where is the success of the Wii?
Granted the Wii ain't subsidised, so Nintendo doesn't need t
Nintendo is breaking another rule... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re: But is it creaming were it counts? (Score:2)
What was it's competition though? No denying it would have sold plenty anyway, but even if you owned every console what games were competing with it? If they were released against a top tier title then you would have seen a very different picture.
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Yes, it says there are about twice the amount of PS2 in the world as the total of ALL next gen systems. Somehow, those customers and those consoles did not vanish overnight when the next gen appeared and as such the people are still buying games for it, especially such a hit as God of War 2. This is the critically acclaimed sequel to a critically acclaimed game. The first one sold
software sales? (Score:2, Insightful)
1. Wii Sports
2. Wii Play
3. MAYBE one other game (usually Trauma Center)
The only reason they get Wii Play is it comes with the controller and you need to have at least 2 controllers for the Wii.
I also don't know any one that's bought more than 2 controllers.
So far the 360 seems to have great software sales - with a high number of games sold for every console out there.
The PS3 can't seem to sell consoles or software - but that'
Virtual console? (Score:2)
It doesn't help Wii sales... (Score:2, Insightful)
The "Why" is very easy... (Score:2)
it's the name (Score:5, Funny)
Customer First, it's that simple (Score:4, Insightful)
So what do Joe and Jane want? Fun, something to play together and with friends, something that's easy. Gameplay first, killer graphics second.
And the thing is: Most of what Joe and Jane want also appears to Harald Hardcore. A fun game simply is a fun game, and even if you could code better graphics yourself on your overclocked PC, it still is a fun game.
And that's the hard part: Coding is the easy part of game design. Making a good game is the hard part. Always has been. Maybe that's why so many PC and Xbox and PS3 titles try to sell on their graphics alone.
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Then they made it cheap enough that it was an impulse buy.
I've heard that before in this discussion. I still can't wrap my head around it. Do you guys really think 300-400 is in the "impulse buy" category? It's not an impulse buy, it's an "that's a good value, these other consoles are too damn expensive for a damn gaming system" buy.
Everything else is a party game.
You say that as if is something negative. Newsflash: Party games are what the target market is looking for. I've owned a Wii since launch day. Do you want to know what the people coming over now and then for a game are requesting to
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There's one precedent I can name - the Atari 2600. The day my parents bought the Atari, they stayed up until sunrise playing breakout. They bought probably 15 games for that system, and never bought another console - until the Wii.
Nintendo's secret - women like the Wii (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nintendo's secret - women like the Wii (Score:5, Funny)
But if it did, would it increase your Gamerscore on Live? Or would you lose points for doing the opposite of gaming?
What competition? (Score:3, Interesting)
Saying the Wii is blowing away the "competition" is sort of like suggesting that the Honda Accord is dominating Corvette and Porsche.
Blue Ocean Strategy (Score:3, Informative)
That's why the Wii is beating Sony and Microsoft.
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Man, am I in a mood for juvenile bad humour today. And not even doing it AC.
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