@bgranli @driklir @Angelsoft717 That's like saying the choir cares about the preacher's sermon, this is a politically divided issue, the only one's that'll watch it already have their minds made up, the rest of us see what actually happens objectively, and don't need some bias picture painted for us telling us why all men are evil.
Like most "documentaries" it paints the issue from one side, like watching a Michael Moore movie, lots of facts and other takes are conveniently left out to drive the point home. Why bother?
@Slim_Lyrics @da_chub Yeah, Nintendo's whole attitude these days is basically: "What you see is what you get, don't like it, too bad."....Didn't used to be this way, 'tis a shame.
@CidX1 exactly, casual gamers by definition, don't commit to anything, so nintendo expecting wii owners to buy wii-u, I think they are missing the point
It's about principle. I don't care if I'm always connected, I won't buy something that FORCES me to be connected. Why? Because it helps them, and doesn't do a thing for me. It's not customer focused. Any company that sets restrictions on or forces me to do anything with the product I buy, automatically loses me as a customer. It's all about choice, when you take choice out of the equation, you alienate people. If there was an offline mode to play games, I wouldn't have a problem with this.
@max-hit @bluefox755 @tionmedon perhaps, that's just the nature of the marketplace though i suppose, would be nice to have access to every game on one piece of hardware.
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