Nintendo would love for us to keep paying $40 or so for portable games. Never mind that 99-cent stuff on iPhone. Those games are a threat to Nintendo? Well, theyâre a ârisk,â Nintendo says.
âI actually think one of the biggest risks today in our gaming industry are these inexpensive games that are, candidly, disposable from a consumer standpoint,â Nintendo of America Reggie Fils-Aime told Game Trailer TV host Geoff Keighley in the Spike TV seriesâ latest episode. File-Aime was on the show to promote the Nintendo 3DS, Nintendoâs next portable gaming machine, which launches next month in America.
Fils-Aime wouldnât call $1 iPhone staple Angry Birds disposable. He called that one âunder-priced.â But, he said, these cheap games create a âmentality for the consumer that a piece of gaming content should only be $2.â He said that 3DS launch-window submarine game Steel Diver, on the other hand, is a âfull-fledgedâ game that will be worth its $40 or so asking price.
https://lastchance.cc/hands-on-with-steel-diver-on-the-3ds-5737840%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Nintendo has sold some superb small downloadable games on its DSi system for $5 or less. But those arenât the kind of games Nintendo is currently promoting for its next system. Nintendo is pushing full-priced store-bought games like Nintendogs + Cats and Pilotwings Resort. Of a lot of those cheap iPhone games, Fils-Aime cracked: âI actually think some of those games are overpriced for one or two dollars, but thatâs a whole different story.â
Nintendoâs mocked bad, cheap iPhone games. Sony did so before them. Are those games so bad for gamers? Do they set expectations for game prices so low that weâll refuse to pay for more expensive, grander games to be made? Or are those cheap games only a problem for the companies that prefer to sell video games for $40 and up. We shall see.
https://lastchance.cc/sony-psp-ad-mocks-apple-iphone-gaming-5613917%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E