If it wasnât obvious at its launch in November, then this past week should have made it clear: The Wii U is functionally irrelevant to sports video games, and there is no reason for any sports fan to buy the console. The only question now is how much that will really matter to the fate of the machine.
Several intemperate, since-deleted tweets from an EA Sports software architect on Friday, slamming the Wii U as âcrap,â and Nintendo as a console-maker with a self-centered, stone-age approach, may cause that guy a lot of trouble internally. I doubt he loses his job for it. Words are but the skin of thoughts, and heâs worked with EA Sports for a very long time. For termination to be on the table, heâd have to be jeopardizing some productive and profitable working relationship with such candid and unauthorized remarks. If EAâs own official and authorized statements preceding the outburst are any indication, then none exists. Alienating the Nintendo constituency, however sensitive it may be, is meaningless if youâre not even making games for it to buy.
https://lastchance.cc/ea-sports-developer-calls-wii-u-crap-and-nintendo-wa-508481261%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
And Electronic Arts isnât. The worldâs largest maker and seller of sports video games straight up told Kotaku on Thursday it has not a thing in development for the Wii U. Then, to Eurogamer on Friday, an official company statement blamed the âdisappointingâ sales performance of FIFA 13 on the Wii U as the reason the series wouldnât make another version for the console. Madden was confirmed out a couple of weeks before that. Elsewhere, NBA 2K14 remains âTBAâ for its release in October, with WWE 2K14 specifically named for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 only.
Despite the Wiiâs stepchild status in the core-gaming discussion for the past eight years, it still had a more meaningful presence in the sports genre in any year than its high-definition successor does in its debut, especially in the sports where its motion controller was naturally suited. Yes, EA Sports embarrassed itself with outsourced, de-rigeur ports of its team sports franchises like Maddenânot to mention last yearâs scandalously retreaded FIFA 13, in some ways worse than what MLB 2K13 attempted to pass off. Still, Tiger Woods PGA Tourâs Wii version was, through 2011, the critical winner against all other platforms; Grand Slam Tennisâremember that old thing?âhad a solid Wii-only release in 2011 before it thudded on the core consoles in 2012. Today, if you want to play golf or tennis on the Wii Uânot an unreasonable expectation given the Wii brandâs whitebread family reputationâyou have to do it with a used copy of Wii Sports or Wii Sports Resort
https://lastchance.cc/ea-has-no-games-in-development-for-nintendos-wii-u-507588994%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Does any of this really matter? Nintendo may have done just fine, going back to the DS, with a platform suited only to one developerâitself. But even if cartoony sports offerings like EAâs embarrassing All-Play series, or token âcoreâ games like The Conduit, Red Steel or Madworld, were sales losersâas the EA Sports tweeter obstreperously, and correctly, reminded usâtheir presence nominally bootstrapped the Wii to a high-definition hardware generation in which it did not belong.
Now, two days before Microsoft unveils its next console, with EA and EA Sports removing its Nintendo commitmentâand 2K Sports sure to followâthe Wii U does not even have that. If the Wii U wasnât faced with being a technological backwater after two years, itâs looking at being a niche platform in its first. Sure, Segaâand God, after Aliens: Colonial Marines, what a desperate operation that must be right nowâlocked arms with Nintendo for three exclusive Sonic the Hedgehog titles on Wii U. That means a treacly minigame collection like Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games is the only licensed sports title, for the foreseeable future, on the Wii U.
https://lastchance.cc/sonic-the-lost-world-the-next-sonic-game-will-launch-508189077%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Maybe this would work if Nintendo was the only, or the clearly dominant console maker, and games were developed for it and then ported to other hardware with the unique features stripped out Those days are gone forever Console publishing today is like a series of high-class parties on the same night Sure, you can have a strict dress code The B-list guests will be there if they they can wear the same outfit from another event. The A-list will be there if itâs worth being seen.
https://lastchance.cc/when-only-42-people-are-playing-madden-on-the-wii-u-it-5968909%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Stick Jockey is Kotakuâs column on sports video games. It appears Sundays.
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