Taken from N'Gai Croal's Newsweek blog is a very interesting linked article for the naysayers who say Nintendo is Dooming the Industry. http://dubiousquality.blogspot.com/2007/06/console-post-of-week.html
I usually talk about data in this post, but for once, let's use our imagination instead of numbers.
I think it's interesting to consider what this console market would look like, right now, if Nintendo hadn't created the Wii. Let's imagine that the Wii doesn't exist, and that Nintendo exited the console market after the Gamecube.
Is it possible that instead of all these magazine articles talking about how the gaming demographic is expanding rapidly, that instead we'd be seeing articles about the "great gaming crash?"
It's not unfair to argue that the 360 and the PS3 would have higher sales, to some degree, if the Wii didn't exist, but their price would still be an obstacle. Microsoft and Sony are doing everything they can to ignore the hard-wired fact that consoles are a $299 market. It doesn't matter if you include a microwave, a snowblower, and a Hemi--it's still a $299 market.
Take the Wii's seven million units in six months out of the console base, though, and you could make a serious argument that console gaming is floundering,
Sure, some people now say "Well, of course it's selling like crazy--it's $249!" In a word: bullshoot. None of those people were saying that before the console was released--almost everyone was questioning Nintendo's ability to survive in the console market.
So take out the Wii. Have a console at $399 and one at $599. Have them selling, combined, about 600,000 units worldwide in April. You know what the story would be? Next-Gen is dead.
It would be the end of days. Newsweek would have a magazine cover with 360's and PS3's being buried in the desert, along with Atari 2600 E.T. cartridges.
So for all these high-paid analysts who claim that the Wii succeeding is bad for the gaming industry, I say think again. Nintendo is saving everyone's ass until Microsoft and Sony stop kidding themselves and price their consoles for the mass market.
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