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Originally posted by: Spak-Spang
Hmmm let my try to make my point another way.
During the NES, and SNES era. Nobody would have argued that Mario was a I LOVE HALO 2 game. Mario was a platformer that agreed with all ages. Mature games loved the game, younger players enjoyed the game, and teens enjoyed the game.
The same has been true with EVERY ONE of Nintendo's major franchises has this mass appeal.
Now, you we changed the rules on Nintendo. We have told them that we believe Mario is 'I LOVE HALO 2'. We believe Pokemon is 'I LOVE HALO 2', and now we believe Zelda is 'I LOVE HALO 2'. Why because they get an 'E' rating for everyone?
Mario 64 and specially Mario Sunshine had some really difficult sections of the game that could only be beaten by skilled, sophisticated players. Sure the plot was silly, and colors were bright, but the game itself was a true Mario experience.
Pokemon is a very serious RPG wrapped around a cute package, and a lighthearted story. However, because of a cartoon show that exists no 'mature' gamer will touch the series.
Nintendo's style has always been to make great games that appeal to everyone...and people have now twisted that to mean Nintendo doesn't care about mature gamers.
Well I ask what about these series is not for mature gamers:
Mario
Mario Kart
Fire Emblem
Super Smash Brothers
Advance Wars
Metroid
Zelda
Mario RPGs (Paper, and GBA/DS games)
Has there been a game or two in these series that has appealed to younger markets alittle more? Sure. But look back and tell me that Nintendo has really changed their style much from back in the day? No, we have changed and become jadded. Because now it is acceptable to have Cop Killing heros, raping and stealing cars in our games. (YEAH, that is really Mature.)
Nintendo's approach is to gaming is more mature and sophisticated than most of the M rated games out there...but we just won't accept it, because the industry has become overrun by teens that are too insecure to play anything accept what looks cool to them.
Back in the NES and SNES days, video gamers were predominantly pre-teen and teenage boys. The debate over "kid games" didn't exist to any great extent because game content was fine for that audience. But the audience grew up. NES gamers are likely playing PlayStation and Xbox now (if anything).
If you're trying to say the market changed and Nintendo didn't change with it, then I agree 100%. But that's Nintendo's fault. Irrelevance is the DNA for failure. This shift in the market is not a fad. Video gaming is a subset of pop culture now which spans all age groups. You either move with the times or fade into obscurity.
We know what Nintendo's style is.
The problem isn't what they're doing. It's what they're not doing. Not everybody wants "everybody" games. Clearly their increasing marketplace irrelevance has indicated this. They rely on "everybody" games because they have to. A healthy, diversified platform wouldn't have that problem.
Another Mario or Zelda is not the answer to the gaping hole that is "no answer to Halo, Doom, Half-Life 2, World of Warcraft, GTA, Call of Duty, Unreal Tournament, etc." And if those games are only meant for insecure teens, then I will proudly say I'm a 27 year old trapped in a teenage time warp. Because those are the types of games Nintendo lacks, and some of which I would LOVE to play on this new controller.
The marketplace hasn't been overrun with teenagers since the 90's. There are just as many real, "secure" adults out there playing games as there are pimply-faced kids, if not more so. And about 80% of them aren't playing GameCube, that's for sure.
Perception is reality in business. Nintendo has a perception problem, whether real or imaginary. As couchmonkey said, the definition of "mature" can be debated, but we all know what we mean despite whatever personal spin we want to put on it. Perhaps "mature" really isn't the right word. But we should at least be able to understand it in theory.
What is Nintendo going to do to reverse the very real trend, if anything? That remains to be seen. They're capable of setting the pace with a Halo killer if they so choose to make one with the new controller. They've been *all talk* when it comes to the mature/hip/whatever demographic, with no bite. So let's see something, if they're really serious about being for "everybody".