Riiiiight. They should become Sega. Because, y'know, that's worked out so well for Sega.
Nintendo released the most popular console of this generation and set the presumed market paradigm on its ear. Arguably, that hasn't been without its downsides, but something needed to be done; the model that every generation of console was simply more powerful than the last was heading for another early-eighties market crash, and may yet. We need to start moving video games in new directions rather than just piling more powerful chips into consoles that the producers can't afford to sell at a price point people will accept, forcing developers to create games that can't pull in their production costs. It could be said that it's that model which is Nintendo's nemesis right now, more than gimmickry.
Nintendo needs to show that it takes third-party developers seriously, and that it's willing to do more on its home consoles to embrace the Internet and the mostly digital-distribution independent scene which may end up providing much of the content we play in the future. It needs to have a better sense of how things like its touch-screen controller will add value to the playing experience and differentiate it from its opposition in positive ways, and communicate that to its customers.
What it doesn't need to do is abandon hardware. Leaving the field to Sony and Microsoft would be a disaster for all of us.
Nintendo released the most popular console of this generation and set the presumed market paradigm on its ear. Arguably, that hasn't been without its downsides, but something needed to be done; the model that every generation of console was simply more powerful than the last was heading for another early-eighties market crash, and may yet. We need to start moving video games in new directions rather than just piling more powerful chips into consoles that the producers can't afford to sell at a price point people will accept, forcing developers to create games that can't pull in their production costs. It could be said that it's that model which is Nintendo's nemesis right now, more than gimmickry.
Nintendo needs to show that it takes third-party developers seriously, and that it's willing to do more on its home consoles to embrace the Internet and the mostly digital-distribution independent scene which may end up providing much of the content we play in the future. It needs to have a better sense of how things like its touch-screen controller will add value to the playing experience and differentiate it from its opposition in positive ways, and communicate that to its customers.
What it doesn't need to do is abandon hardware. Leaving the field to Sony and Microsoft would be a disaster for all of us.