Quote
Originally posted by: Ian Sane
I don't agree with this "Nintendo mistakes made them who they are today" stuff because I don't think Nintendo had learned much from their past mistakes.
That's pretty faulty logic, Ian.
Nintendo is in the position they're in because they HAVE learned from their mistakes.
Mistake #1: 3rd parties hate Nintendo's gutsSolution: Iwata is a diplomat first and foremost. Also, he himself IS a former game developer and as such he can most easily relate to the challenges devs face. I think that it is absolutely pertinent that the head chair at Nintendo be filled by someone who has at one point developed games themselves.
The lengths Nintendo has gone through to aid 3rd parties in developing for their console are vast and many, from lowering licensing fees to making Wii devkits under $5,000 to lowering the bar for newer devs when it comes to licensing them, Nintendo is making a HUGE effort to see to it that bringing games to their consoles is as easy as possible.
Mistake #2: The GC is a one-legged man in an ass-kicking contestSolution: Start throwing punches. Rather than try to beat Sony and MS at their own game, a game which Nintendo outright lacks the resources to win, Nintendo changed their console and differentiated themselves so much that you can't even file them in the same category anymore. This not only forced customers to think about them differently but it also forced devs to do the same, resulting in better review scores for games like Godfather on Nintendo hardware, something which was previously unheard of.
To say Nintendo didn't learn from their mistakes is ignoring all of the changes they've made in direct response to their previous failures. Right now, 3rd parties are loving the Wii, both in terms of developing for it and selling assloads of games on it, and the fact that the Wii is the cheapest to develop for AND will soon have the highest installed worldwide userbase ensures that even if Sony and MS bring out their own motion-sensing controllers, it won't change the fact that the Wii will still get the lion's share of games because it costs so much less to develop for.