What do you do when it burns?
Let it burn!ArticleThis article is a bunch of game designers talking about the rising dev costs and the lack of innovation in the industry. Warning: Contains MS, Sony and EA bashing that would get any poster here banned!I won't give an abstract because I believe you need to read the whole article for the full effect. You might be able to tell what's in the article from my response but you're really missing out if you don't read it.
What does this mean for Nintendo? Well, obviously indy games are a real asset if you have them on your system. Cheap to make and potentially megasellers. One problem is that indies can't afford those console devkits. Since devkits aren't a major source of income anyway, giving those away for cheap would not hurt the bottomline much. If Nintendo had an affordable publishing solution that would allow indies to actually publish their games without selling their souls the indy market might just thrive. One method would be online distribution, since indies won't be tied to physical manufacturing volumes or something, their games would simply be on the net, for anyone who pays the charge to download. Let Nintendo take a not too large part of those d/l fees (part for the maintenance, part for making the suits believe in the idea) and give the rest to the developer. This way they'll see many new game ideas thriving on their system with little possibility for them to go to other consoles. So an indy dev could decide whether to use the online or the retail option, depending on how much they can pay for publishing.
Indy games can be truly invaluable assets, some of the best games on my PC are developed by independants. If Nintendo made the non-pornographic japanese indy games available for the rest of the world the Revolution will never see a lack of great arcade games (japanese indies love arcade-style games).
A revolution in how the games are played could also be a revolution of how games are distributed, right? (not that it replaces controller innovation but enhances it)