I've read in Game Informer magazine where they say things like "the Wii is irrelevant" despite how many millions of units its sold, and when they frequently don't even mention when a multiplatform game is available on the Wii even if it is. They also give low scores for Wii games, and they openly criticize graphics which isn't fair because the Wii can't do HD graphics. That's like criticizing a poodle for not being a Rottweiler, or something. If they were reviewing an old 16 or 8 bit game they wouldn't slam it for lacking modern HD graphics. They would just judge it for what it is, but they do do that with the Wii. And I've read many of their articles about the upcoming Wii U and they don't really seem very enthusiastic about it, and they've cited Pachter and other analysts who are saying it will be a failure. So they don't seem to be giving it a fair shake. I don't see them doing the same thing with the PS420.
Oh geez....where to begin

...might as well break this whining, desperate nonsense down. I'm going to preface this by saying that since you didn't set a date on any of this stuff you've "seen", I have to assume you've "seen" it fairly recently, within the last year.
I've read in Game Informer magazine where they say things like "the Wii is irrelevant" despite how many millions of units its sold
The Wii
is irrelevant in the grand scheme of the industry at this point, and it has been since Nintendo and 3rd parties alike decided to abandon it last year. I like Xenoblade and I'm trying to like The Last Story at the moment, but overall there's very little new worth talking about with the Wii and in terms of core gamers (who are the ones reading the magazine) statistically-speaking no one's still playing the Wii. Before I hooked the thing up again for The Last Story, the only use mine was seeing was when I loaned it out to my best friend to play Virtual Console games on. The Wii is
dead, and Nintendo has
clearly moved on. It
is irrelevant.
and when they frequently don't even mention when a multiplatform game is available on the Wii even if it is.
Often times, the Wii version of a multiplatform game is substantially different and often it's reviewed separately. Judging by the sheer amount of editorial incompetence I regularly see online from major publications, I'm sure the Wii version is simply not listed by mistake. That's something that's easy to do when certain games are released on a large number of platforms. Hardly a conspiracy.
They also give low scores for Wii games
The Wii's library has largely been **** from any reasonable point of view, especially from 3rd parties. There have been bright spots every once in a while, but the Wii earned its reputation as the shovelware console for good reason. Considering you're one of the most vocal people here when it comes to how badly 3rd parties have developed for Wii, I'd think you would know this already. I still see reviewers line up left and right to kiss Nintendo's ass on just about every game for the sake of nostalgia, so your "low scores" can only be for 3rd party games. You know, the ones you
regularly complain about?
and they openly criticize graphics which isn't fair because the Wii can't do HD graphics. That's like criticizing a poodle for not being a Rottweiler, or something. If they were reviewing an old 16 or 8 bit game they wouldn't slam it for lacking modern HD graphics. They would just judge it for what it is, but they do do that with the Wii.
Being on a technologically inferior platform doesn't give Nintendo or 3rd party developers an excuse to be lazy and deliver substandard product. Believe it or not, the Wii
is considered to be in the same console generation as the PS3 or 360. Or is that only something you want to remember when you're bragging that the Wii outsold every other console this generation? The PS3 and 360 are its competition, and the Wii is judged accordingly, not just when it's convenient for you. Besides, being on a less-capable console does not mean games have to look ugly and lazy, and yet so many on the Wii
do. There is much to be said for making do with what you have. Artistic design
matters, and on that count the vast majority of Wii developers (including in many cases Nintendo)
FAILED by not designing their games with art styles that the Wii could make
look good.
Wii games weren't usually criticized for not "looking like HD games." They were criticized for looking
ugly. When developers put the time into creating games with unique art styles, such as Zack & Wiki; Madworld; Skyward Sword; Kirby's Epic Yarn (which, I remind you, won GameTrailer's "best graphics" award the year it released); Donkey Kong Country Returns; Muramasa: The Demon Blade; Super Mario Galaxies 1 & 2; etc. the games were all widely praised for how great they looked on Wii. But the Wii's limitations meant developers had to put
effort into making their games work within the limitations of the Wii's hardware, and most chose not to.
I especially find your complaint that the Wii "isn't judged for what it is" amusing considering just how many people here have complained about the "good for a Wii game" phrase.
And I've read many of their articles about the upcoming Wii U and they don't really seem very enthusiastic about it
Actually, I've seen journalists/reviewers from Gametrailers and Giant Bomb explicitly praise Wii U exclusive games like Zombi U; Rayman Legends; and Project P-100. Those 3 have received a fairly warm reception in general, actually. But the Wii U is frankly not an exciting console to most people, and what little of a tech advantage it has over the existing HD consoles is not evident just yet. Nintendo has also refused to announce
anything newsworthy about the console such as price or technical details. Stop the presses, folks! It plays multiplatform games I and probably most game journalists can already play on the HD consoles we already own (with some games already having been out a year). Nintendo's own Wii U launch software isn't particularly interesting: a Pikmin game that even the NWR folks here have said is good but isn't
that new of an experience; yet
another New Super Mario Bros. game; and a mini-game collection. Oh boy! After 6 years of the Wii being plagued by a wave of mini-game collections,
CAN I play another one?!
The Wii U has the
potential to be an interesting, excitement-driving console just like any other. But it doesn't have the software yet to deserve that level of hype. If it actually gets games worth salivating over, the salivating will come.
and they've cited Pachter and other analysts who are saying it will be a failure. So they don't seem to be giving it a fair shake.
Actually, Pachter has said that he thinks the Wii U will be successful, but nowhere near to the degree Wii was because the casuals have moved on to other devices like IOS devices. Now, something he
has said is that the diehard Nintendo fans are zealous/gullible enough that they'd buy a cardboard box for the price of the Wii U if it had the Nintendo logo on it. And considering some of your posts, I'm not sure he's wrong in your case.
As for this "fair shake" business, have you been in a
coma for the last couple of years?
Every new piece of traditional gaming hardware has met a great deal of skepticism lately. When the 3DS released, analysts were skeptical that the market hadn't moved on to IOS devices. When the
Vita released, it got the same treatment, made even worse by the PSP's poor showing in NA and the 3DS' failure to succeed early on. It's natural that the Wii U would receive similar treatment, as will all future devices as long as console sales continue to decline and IOS/online free-to-play continues to gobble up the market.
I don't see them doing the same thing with the PS420.
That's because we don't
know ANYTHING about the hypothetical PS4 or Xbox 720. There is no release date. There are no announced games in production. There are no screenshots. There is
NOTHING but speculation. Rest assured, if the market does not pick up considerably by the time those consoles are announced; dated; and priced, skepticism will be dealt to them as well (
especially if the Wii U under-performs since the big hope right now is that "new hardware" will revitalize the console market).
And with that, I am
done with this conversation. My patience for this matter was already low to begin with, and now it's at an end. I doubt anything I've written will make a damn bit of difference to the persecution complex of the typical fanboy.