| Wii going after the non gamers - fat chance |
|
|
|
| Written by Stan Beer | |
| Sunday, 08 October 2006 | |
|
Well I have news for the Nintendo boss. The reason that most middle aged people don't play games is that more often or not they're too busy doing other things. Like bringing up children, feeding their families, furthering their careers and socialising with friends. Yes, occasionally they may dabble with a games console. But for most people over 35, life is too short for electronic games. If Nintendo really was serious about reaching the non-gamer market, then perhaps it would have done well to take a leaf out Microsoft's and Sony's books. Both companies realised long ago that the way to get to non-gamers with consoles is to give them something other than games, such as DVD players, internet connections and video streaming. The Wii may feature a unique 3-dimensional controller, but the device itself is so one-dimensional. Fancy having a console that plays games off standard DVDs, yet it won't even play DVD movies. By not including a simple DVD player on the Wii console, Nintendo missed a real opportunity. Most consumers still don't give a damn about high definition video technology because it's too expensive. However, everyone wants a DVD player in their living room. One can imagine consumers tossing up between buying an Xbox 360, PS2 (PS3 is in a different price league) and Nintendo Wii. Many of the gamers will go for the Nintendo Wii of course because it's a novel gaming console. The non-gamers looking for a family entertainment console will look at the Wii and it's unique gaming capabilities and say, "Gee that's interesting but can I upgrade its DVD player to high definition later like the Xbox 360? What, it doesn't even have a DVD player?"{moscomment}
Get stories like this delivered daily - FREE - subscribe now When you subscribe get a 12 months license for LiveProject Valued at $99 USD |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|




Tags


Subscribe to iTWire's daily e-newsletter now and get a FREE 12 month license to project management software valued at $99 USD. 


