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Originally posted by: Deguello
It's funny watching Ian recycle the same old arguments over and over.
I think Bill's right. He's just bitter that when he complains about Nintendo now he seems less like a "concerned Nintendo fan" and more like a "raving lunatic." He has run out of real world evidence to source his "wisdom" and now can only source his own opinion, which is as easy to discount as having one of your own to counter it. His supporter no longer say "Ian has a point" or "Ian's probably right." They too isolate him, mainly because he cannot "turn it off" as evidenced in the bizarre NHL discussion thread which Ian compares the NHL to Nintendo for no reason. He cannot join in any positive discussion about any game whatsoever, as he routinely does not own any, whether they be cult favorites or mainstream hits. He doesn't like them. In fact, he is closer to the "non-gamers" he despises than most of us.
"Ian"
He stands on the sidewalk
A twice-creased sandwich sign
"The end is nigh!" he reveals
Answered only in tire squeals
How lonely he must feel...
Ponder these haiku:
A Batman Image
Texts Of Worthless Filth Appear
Do Not Click Reply
Remember That Time
Ian Spake Of DS Launch?
No, Didn't Think So.
Deg, that's stupid. Really stupid. Ian's observation is pretty sharp. Up until this generation, there's never been a change in market leader without the previous leader doing something, or several things, incredibly wrong. Maybe the circumstances would have been different this time, we don't know. However, once again, the market leader made far too many mistakes, and the Wii and even 360, have really been able to capitalize on them. Would the Wii had been this successful had the PS3 not included Blu-ray, hadn't had the sixaxis, and weren't $600 at launch? We'll never know. However, we do know that Sony has made some big mistakes and it has cost them their position in this gen's console race.
I think the Dreamcast is a great reference in this case, too. It had great graphics, a desirable price point, lots of highly acclaimed games, an open, accessible, and cheap online program, and heavy Japanese developer support, yet all people wanted to talk about from the months after the DC's release to when the PS2 was released was how the powerful PS2 processor could pilot smart bombs. To me, I'd say Sony had won before the battle started. Did I buy a DC initially? No, I decided to wait for the PS2, after all, it was supposed to be much better. Then, the PS2 launched with no decent games, no online, short supply, and with terrible graphics, too. Who won? The PS2. Why? Certainly not because the DC wasn't a great competitor at the time. Sony used their position as market leader to push the PS2.