How on earth can anyone give Miyamoto credit for a game that was made by the late great Gumpei Yokoi! I do not ususally even *try* and correct people unless it pertains to false statments about Sega, but there is *one* guy at Nintendo I respect above all others and it is *this* man, who was far mroe influancial at Nintendo than Shigeru Miyamoto ever wanted to be.
This guy is resoponible for the Game and Watch, teh D-Pad, the gameBoy *AND* Metroid, ammong other things. To give the wrong man credit for his work, especially when he left the company in shame after his first major failure, and died not long after, is to compeltely deam the work the man did. It's one thing to say Shiggy is past in prime, but to use a game he didn't even create as an example of his greatness, thats wrong. I respect Miyamoto as well, a lot, enough in fact to try and spell his name correctly!
It was also mentioned but not fully elebroated on, but Pokemon, which is one of, if not the, most popular and sucessful Nintendo franchises out there, and it wasn't created by nor had Miyamoto had anything to do with its creation. Now if you are going to continue to argue that Miyamoto is past anything, start with making sure that *his* games are at least credite4d as *his* and the games that aren't make sure their creatores are given thier credit so that you can make an argument or point that has facts in it.
I am sorry, but like most people here, I grew up playing Mario, Zelda, Star Fox, Donkey Kong, and may other games made by this man you are trying to discredit. And I continue to see him create magical experiences for the young people today. Not to mention that Nintendogs, one of the *best* selling games on the DS, which is also his creation, is still very much a game. Also you said that Tamgachi, and Nintendogs, don't qualify for whatever your argument is, because they didn't change the fundametals of gaming, WTF is that about? Are yous aying that once a great game comes out *every* major game afterwards has to copy it? Because that is how I read your post, as did others aparently based on the responses.
Now subject at hand, No I do not think he is past his prime because he continues to make magical experiences for people today just like he did when I was a kid. I agree with Yuji Naka, he received as much critical accliam and commercial sucess during his time as anyother great developer, but he has even stated himself he does't have the heart for it anymore. Now he is undersifferent cisumstances though, his company got kicked around and dragged through the mud one to many times and failure after failure will eventualy drag a man down.