especially in light of how much Nintendo's competitors seem to have their act together right now.
HAHAHAHAHA.
Yeah, that's right. Sony has their act together. The PS3 continually sells at least double if not 3-4x what the Wii U sells every month, 3rd parties aren't reluctant to actually release software on the PS3, and there has been a great deal of positive buzz (especially among the Indie community) for the upcoming PS4. And while the PS4's social features don't appeal to me and we had an entire NFR episode where I criticized the hell out of their February reveal (and their handling of the Vita), there does seem to be excitement for what the device offers.
Then there's Microsoft. The 360 is the best-selling console every month in recent memory (typically 4-5 times what the Wii U sells), and although the Kinect has only ever properly worked in the Dance Central games, it has maintained public interest in the 360. Microsoft didn't "win" this last console generation in terms of console sales, but they sure seemed to win it in terms of software and public perception. They are
THE platform for the most popular series released every year in many people's eyes, especially if there's online multiplayer. The rumors about the Durango aren't promising and Microsoft seems to be chasing the Indies away right now, but right now they have
THE dominant games platform by a wide margin.
Then there's Nintendo. You all know how badly Nintendo has ****ed-up the Wii U so far: almost no 3rd party support, no big console-selling games since launch, no consumer confidence, and extremely poor console sales every single month this year. As for the console itself, it
barely works right now and is well-known for crashing, leading to
two STILL-upcoming firmware updates this year to try to fix it. The 3DS and Wii U are still largely separate entities, especially when it comes to their eShops. We're going to be spoon-fed fee-locked updates to a portion of Virtual Console games we've already purchased, with Nintendo completely silent on their handling of
new VC titles once the service officially launches. There is next to no excitement for the thing, and no one wants to make new games for it right now outside of a handful of ports and LEGO City.
So yeah, I have said and I will say that Nintendo's competitors have their act together right now, and Nintendo does not in any way; shape; or form when it comes to the Wii U.