Topic RSSPeople weren’t impressed with Nintendo’s E3 show nor the Wii U thus far: Article here
New Super Mario Bros. UWii U, we hardly know you.
Of all the companies showcasing new games and hardware at the E3 video game convention this week, none face as much pressure as Nintendo. The once -mighty Wii may have left an indelible mark on the game industry by broadening the very definition of a gamer, but it’s been on a downhill slide for years now. After toiling away in its top-selling shadow, Microsoft and Sony’s more mature consoles are now proving their worth in terms of sheer staying power, trouncing the Wii on the charts month after month.
But with the first new home console in six years coming out this holiday, Nintendo has a chance to leapfrog the competition with the Wii U and define what the next generation of gaming will look like. It’s a risky position, but one that could pay off big time if the company plays the game well.
So far, it isn’t. Instead of giving fans a launch lineup, a deep feature dive, a sophisticated online network reveal and possibly a price and a release date at E3, the company merely asked us to wait longer, to remain patient, and to trust in Mario.
Unfortunately for Nintendo, no one’s buying it. Despite high hopes for a big presence at E3, the company’s stock dipped 2% after their disappointing media briefing Tuesday. While new Mario and Pikmin games have fans excited, the press has had a field day taking shots at the company’s lack of a coherent message. What is the Wii U, exactly, and who is it for?
[ Related: Wii U product shots ]
It’s a problem Nintendo hasn’t faced in ages. The Wii connected immediately. You wave the remote, you hit a tennis ball. Innovative enough to wow gamers yet digestible enough for those who last played a Mario game in 1985, it bridged a gap and brought countless new players into the fold. They kept it simple with the 3DS, too: it’s a handheld system with a glasses-free 3D screen and fancier processing guts. “Forget that pricey Sony nonsense,” the company seemed to say, “because we figured it out already.” The thing just clicked.
But the Wii U? It’s a game console that you play with a tablet controller, though Nintendo’s disproportionate emphasis on the tablet has led some outlets, like CNN, to misconstrue the device as being an add-on for the Wii you have gathering dust on your shelf. Others think the tablet is the console itself. Actually trotting out the console — you know, the piece of hardware you’ll actually buy and connect to your TV and have sitting in your living room — and doling out some more thorough specs would have helped. Bandying about wonky terms like ‘asymmetric gameplay,’ where the experience of a player using the tablet differs from those using Wii remotes? Not exactly the catchy simplicity Nintendo is known for.
[ Related: Nintendo reveals game lineup at E3 ]
But how about the games? Nintendo showed off 23 Wii U experiences at E3, including an assortment of titles from third parties like Ubisoft and EA. Many of these fell flat, though. An upcoming Wii U version of 2011 masterpiece Batman: Arkham City isn’t exactly a system seller in 2012. Mass Effect 3 is a tremendous game, but by the time it releases for the Wii U it will be a good 8 months old. Even the flagship New Super Mario Bros U — essentially a sequel to New Super Mario Bros. Wii — feels a bit underwhelming, especially when compared to past system-defining Mario games like Super Mario 64 and Super Mario World.
Perhaps most damning was the mild reception of Nintendoland, the collection of mini-games Nintendo hopes will do for the Wii U what Wii Sports did for the Wii. The company ended its press conference with an overlong look at the title, awkwardly wrapping it all up with a fake firework display that left the crowd baffled.
It’s just the latest gaffe from a company struggling to recapture the glory days of the Wii in its prime. A 3DS price drop only four months into that system’s life was considered a desperation move (it has since paid off, at least in terms of goosing sales), prompting company CEO Satoru Iwata to take a whopping 50% pay cut. Earlier this year the company reported its first annual operating loss in 30 years. It’s been a tough ride for Nintendo, yet they inexplicably keep making it tougher.
And the challenges are only growing now that the competition smells blood. Microsoft’s SmartGlass technology essentially mimics the Wii U’s second screen functionality by letting you use your smartphone or tablet to control games or enjoy tangential content. Sony’s Cross-Play between the PS3 and the Vita lets you save games to the cloud and take them with you on the go — a step beyond the Wii U’s living room limitations. A year after its first reveal, and suddenly the Wii U isn’t quite so innovative. Waste enough tech time and eventually you’ll be lapped.
Nintendo needed to change that perception with an unmistakable win at E3. The world wanted to get to know the only new system of 2012, but we’re left with more questions than answers. By failing to produce, it’s left the future in doubt — and that’s no way to start the next generation.
Well if you saw E3, Nintendo didn’t have the best showing. There’s still lots we don’t know about the system. Things I do like are:
1) Ubisoft’s commitment to the Wii U
2) The standard controller. Looks like it could be a lot of fun to play with
3) Deeper online immersion
4) NSMB Wii U
There’s still so much we don’t know, so I can’t say I’ll get it when its first released. What do you guys think?
7:36 pm
Site Contributor
Site Contributor
March 14, 2012
OfflineI think whats new. The Game press and Yahoo in particular had nothing but disdain and disrespect for the Wii. It flies in the face of their vision of gaming. While they were making potty jokes I was cashing in on my first investment. I KNEW Nintendo had something special!
Articles like this just make me question my original position even moreso. These “journalists” are NEVER right about ANYTHING lol! Journalism in general has always been questionable, but “game journalism” these days is nothing short of a joke.
That said, I still need to know more if I am to buy this IMMEDIATlY. I doubt it. (I have a rule of 6. I need 3 games currently out that interest me, and three games yet to release that interest me brfore I buy a system.)
it will pack 2 controllers in. It has the mother of all KILLER APPS launching with it. If it is priced reasonably then it will sell.
Exploring the New World on Nintendo Switch. Currently Playing: Zelda BOTW, Octopath Traveler, Sonic Mania, Yoku's Island Express, Mega Man 11. Currently Watching: Marble Hornets, Luther, Black Mirror, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 5. Currently Reading: Influence by Robert Cialdini.
7:48 pm
Site Contributor
Site Contributor
March 14, 2012
OfflineAs a brief sidenote (Dont want you guys to think I’ve gotten TOO soft on modern gaming
) I think that if this piece has one point it is that there is a perception that this system is uneeded, especially among your less “hardcore” players. 2D Mario is about the best answer to that question that nintendo can ever give, yet Besides the neat Forge mode idea I am having a hard time understanding how this title requires a jump in hardware.
If the Wii were supported trust me it would at least continue to sell software. 91 million customers is a HUGE audience for your games!
Hardware is another debate entirely, sonce it is debateable whether the Wii has reached maximum market penetration. With NSMB Wii and WiiiSports I could see where the Wii is owned at this point by everyone who wants one.
Still no reason to abandon it, though. This seems to be one thing that competitors such as Sony understand.
Exploring the New World on Nintendo Switch. Currently Playing: Zelda BOTW, Octopath Traveler, Sonic Mania, Yoku's Island Express, Mega Man 11. Currently Watching: Marble Hornets, Luther, Black Mirror, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 5. Currently Reading: Influence by Robert Cialdini.
4:26 pm
May 5, 2012
OfflineI’m not sold yet. The Wii had me right away and there were some great games for it but no where near as many as I have played on my PS3. Most of the good stuff was first party Nintendo titles. Very few 3rd party games were excellent. The Wii-U comes off as kind of gimmicky. I’ll have to try it in person but right now I’m very skeptical. The new Mario looks good but it doesn’t look that much different than the last one for Wii. Once again some more pics and coverage could change my mind but I’m not feeling it and the fact that Nintendo is so tight lipped about everything so close to a system launch isn’t very promising either. Maybe by the fall they will have their ducks in a row and can change my mind but as of now I won’t be getting it anytime soon. This will be the first Nintendo system I will probably skip out on at least at launch anyway.
Not a fanboy, just a gamer...every system has its gems!!
5:51 pm
May 5, 2012
OfflineI dunno, the way they showed so many black consoles in their promotional stuff it should be a launch color. Then again, it’s Nintendo & they did show 5 different Wii colors at E3 which never came to be also. That’s just something else that pisses me off. You don’t have to announce a price or date til closer, I get that for marketing reasons and such but you can at least say these are the colors available at launch & these are the things it comes with. They’re just being WAAAAAY too tightlipped about the whole thing. Their continual online “press events” aren’t doing much to shore up my support either, there’s another one planned for tomorrow or about 2 a.m. eastern time. They’re just way too corporate and sterile.
Not a fanboy, just a gamer...every system has its gems!!
Yes, I don’t like their approach either. However there are a few good things so far. A couple of the Ubisoft games are looking promising; ZombiU and Rayman. The online aspect seems to be closer to what gamers want. The new gamer pad seems intriguing.
But yeah, Nintendo’s approach to giving out information to the fans is mind boggling. I wish I was CEO!
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