Denjet78:
The method you're arguing here is extremely flawed. Nintendo shouldn't do online because, to you, it's pointless. Xbox Live is a failure, to you, because it's nothing but a cacophony of features that you don't care about.
Well, not to offend you, but you don't make up the whole of the gaming universe. These "pointless features" are growing in popularity and people want them. And I'm sorry, but Xbox Live is viewed as quite the success by not just gamers, but the whole of the gaming industry. You're taking your radical opinions on what online should be and applying them to the industry as a means of explaining that Nintendo is right in their lackluster approach to online, because online is something you don't personally care about. Denjet, and Kairon too, it's that exact same elitism that was the downfall of Nintendo with the N64. Nintendo ignored the signs of a growing and changing industry and stuck to what they wanted to do because, frankly, nothing outside of what they wanted to do made any sense to them. And, well, we all know how that turned out.
Look, I'm no big fan of online, either. I don't play PC games, I've never owned an Xbox or 360, and I only have two games for my PS2 and they're Square RPGs. My main consoles for the past 2 generations have been Nintendo-made, so technically that means I shouldn't even know what "online gaming" is. But I can still see the importance of Nintendo taking online seriously. Online is popular this gen, and it's only going to continue growing more popular. If Nintendo wants to remain relevant to gaming, online is something they're eventually going to have to take seriously. And, for the umpteenth time, this does not mean Nintendo needs to copy Xbox Live. Nintendo can't do everything, you guys are right about that much, but that should NOT stop them from providing the best they can. And I think it's pretty damn near unanimous that they aren't doing that with friend codes and a shoddy online structure. Nintendo may be new to online, but online sure as hell isn't new. Wii online, as it stands now, is crap even when you consider that it's Nintendo's first real try. Even developers have said that it doesn't look like Nintendo gave it any thought.
Oh, and restricting Wii Online to a community based system would severely limit the Wii to only those who lived in a community of Wii users. And that isn't me. I know 3 other people who have Wiis. I can imagine any online game being terribly limited if I had to rely on only three other people to be online and in the mood to play the game I wanted to play for a decent experience. I can understand Nintendo wanting to emphasize that type of connectivity to set it apart from the competition, but they need to also provide a way for me to get online at any time I want, and find people to play online with even when my friends may be online and playing other games. And, I'm sorry, but Nintendo is a multi-billion dollar company; they can provide that BASIC experiences that other companies have been providing for free for YEARS without having to dig deep in their pockets. For Nintendo to deny that connection with the WORLD is a main attraction of online demonstrates that they still haven't gotten rid of some of that "Nintendo is the best and does everything right and knows what's best for gaming" elitism that did them in two generations ago.