I'll strongly agree with a repackaged Wii-Remote with a built-in motion plus. If Nintendo plans to sell a Wii-Remote/M+ combo pack with the black Wii-Remotes, why not just package them together.
Now, then, Come the holiday season, Wii Sports and Wii Sports Resort need to be packaged in with each other. Take out the old bowling, take out the old Golf, and just use the new ones, all on one disc. That can't be too hard, can it? Aren't all the old courses in WSR, anyways? Creating a package like this allows Nintendo to market the Wii again with something a bit more fresh... Especially since I've seen and heard very little WSR advertising out of NYC.
Beyond that, the Wii needs a party pack. One Wii-Remote? Really? The thing is a family console, let's start it out with two, it needs two, to be honest.
So far, my idea is a $250 Wii w/ a Wii Sports All Star Pack and two Wii-Remote w/ Motion Plus and nunchuks. controllers. As of now, this would cost $380, I believe. Not a bad repackaging.
However, there's a problem with this idea, not a big one, but still one that exists: How do you tell consumers you're getting a new, value-added package? How do you advertise that your price just went down a relative $180, in comparison to the previous cost of equal utility? Well, you've got to contrast feature sets. That means it's time to drop the price of the Wii, in it's old form.
How do you do it? Market the new price and the bundle at once. Imagine the original Wii Sports SKU to be a Wii, a Wii-Remote, and a Nunchuk, and ignore Wii Sports. Since Wii Sports is being ignored, we mark down $50, acting like it's a stand-alone console. Now, then, compared to the value pack described above, this version is further missing a Wii-remote/nunchuk combo as the other main missing ingredient. Street Value is $60, but there's no way Nintendo would price the Wii at $140 out of no where. I say take the console to $180.
And there you have the 2009 Holiday Wii pricing. $250 for the family fun bundle, A Wii, Wii Sports All Star Pack, and two complete Wii-Remotes. $70 less gets you the Classic Wii Bundle: Wii, Wii-Remote, Nunchuk, Wii Sports, at a bargain priced $180.
Of course... I've been a proponent of a reduced Wii price/added value for about two years now, because I believe if you want to stay on top, even if you're the clear winner, you can't let your edge in value slide, like Nintendo has. I'd say come Spring, both these retail sets would need to drop another $20-$30 for the rest of the year to remain competitive, myself, since part of the reason why Nintendo decided to use less high-end graphics was to save the end-consumer money, something... they've neglected to remember as of late.