Wow, I really respect that you just re-evaluated the wording you used. Don't get to see that often on the internet where people have to be 100% right or else.Dragonbums said:No, but EA hasn't exactly been honest when they slammed the console on Twitter. Especially when people have showed them saying the exact opposite when it just released.
All the other developers either haven't bothered trying or just didn't care.
It's confusing when Crytek says the WiiU can handle their engine yet have a bunch of other devs call it weak.
EDIT: I guess I should of thought twice about saying they "lied" that was a bit of a jump. Pardon me.
The thing about handling an engine versus handling a fully fleshed out game is quite a different story. Don't forget, the WiiU IS more powerful than either the 360 or the ps3 and those systems are likewise capable of "handling" Crytek's engine.
But when you start to use that engine to add assets and significant storylines then you may begin to run into a problem. Crytek in particular has learned to create engines that scale from low quality to very high. The thing is, this generally only applies to graphics whereas the physics and AI can't be so easily changed/scaled. The next generation is going to be able to advance AI and Physics a lot but that's going to be a problem for weaker machines that would have been able to function normally if not for those advancements because AI and Physics can be pretty darn resource hungry.
I think trying to argue that the WiiU can compete for cutting edge games is a losing battle. Bethesda in general always tries to push the envelope and is always at that forefront of technology so it doesn't make sense for them to develop for consoles that aren't right there with them. Let's be honest, Nintendo brings good ol' fashioned family fun to the table. It's kid safe and it is a nostalgia powerhouse The WiiU and the games it brings will be and are fun. It's just that the Nintendo brand alone is not able to carry premium priced hardware. It can't even play DVDs which takes away futher justification of it as a media console too.
I bought my Wii for Nintendo games. Come the end of the generation I've only gotten a small handful of Nintendo titles I care about and precious few third party titles that ended up also being made available on the other consoles. I'm simply not thinking that the console is worth buying if I'm not getting a full lineup out of it. Keep in mind, you're talking to a person whose childhood was full-blown Nintendo. I love the company and if even a long-term fan like me has grown tired of a console-tax to by the games then something is off.