marc said:
Well had it been good I would have probably got a Wii as I want the Toy Story game.
The shooting one? Many a very bad review of it. Apparently it's dull and often just doesn't work properly. Not worth £200!!!
marc said:
The F1 game looks better on the PSP which is just silly really.
It's not actually
that silly. The PSP and Wii version were farmed out to the same developer.
I think the idea is this. The PSP has almost PS2 quality graphics. The Wii nobody seems to care if it has sub PS2 quality graphics.
So the same team can just write the same shoddy code and create the same shoddy graphics because nobody ever buys third party games on Wii or PSP anyway
It's quite clear really :lol:
Neal said:
That's because the Wii never seems to be overly competent at that sort of game. Don't know why, but it always reminds me of the graphics off the original Playstation :lol:
It's because to make them better requires effort. You can churn out PS2 quality graphics very easily (it's essentially a Gamecube with extras after all). So why bother, as Mr Clam says, nobody thinks third party games will sell, so just put people who can code up PS2 games that are cheap to employ.
Again, Codemasters. Dirt 2 was blindingly good on 360 and Ps3, poor on Wii and PSP. Sells well on 360 and PS3, badly on Wii and PSP. Yet the PS2 had several very good McRae games - looked good and played great (and sold well). So why not the same on the Wii and PSP? No effort put into either the game or trying to sell them.
Neal said:
Should still be fun being able to use the Mario Kart steering wheels for something other than Mario Kart though
That would be brilliant. Controlling a spin off the line with a bit of plastic held three foot in the air :lol:
Just a quick one (that will be a long one) Mr Clam.
The Wii's issue, to me, seems to stem from the dreaded "casual gamer". My view on it is that it's sold to everyone, purely because it's essentially the new "household social activity". Like Simon, Yahtzee and Trivial Pursuit. It's something everyone has, because it's a fad everyone loves for a bit (sometimes years). "Come round to ours, we have a Wii. We'll have a few drinks and play tennis" kind of Saturday night thing (my parents used to have them all the time for above games).
So, millions of Wii's sell to people who only buy a few "new mini games for fun". However, they also buy Nintendo games - most of these people are our age now, and have a great deal of nostalgia for Super Mario World et al. Hence why these games sell so well - recognised branding.
The reason "real" games don't sell so well is simply the Wii may have many millions of units sold, but out of those, I'll bet there are only about the same number of "gamers" as there are on the 360 and PS3. Gamers being the people who play games as a "hobby", doing it regularly. Rather than just when they have mates around, or for a week after they see a new game released.
Some games (like SSBB) will sell to pretty much all the gamers and therefore have a very good attachment rate.
The issue, as far as I can see, is that "serious casual" gamers don't take the Wii seriously. So people like Smithy and Pierre who don't live games, but have always had a PS2 or Xbox to play Fifa or whatever - post pub gaming and weekend hangover gaming really - they just don't buy those types of games on the Wii.
So, the question really is this - is it actually worth putting the effort into these games? I have the Wii and PS3, so I'm never going to buy the Wii version of Dirt 2 - there's no way that the Wii version could be as good. The Wii is good for "original" content, but cross platform? I just don't think that the target audience is there.
Dave brings up Deadly Creatures. I followed dev of that right through and it does look interesting. I've even seen it for £12 which I was tempted by. However, when I want to "get into a game", I want to relax - you can't with the Wii because at some point you end up having to wave your arms around. I like doing that for a bit of fun, but I don't want to be doing for hours on end while I really get into a gaming session. So Deadly Creatures sat on the shelf unbought by me. Travesty? I imagine so, I'm sure I'd love it. However, like Resi 4, I'd find myself not wanting to play it after a few days, just because the chore of arm waving out weighs the joy of playing a good game. It's back to Uncharted 2
I don't know if that makes sense, but it seems to me to be why the Wii does so well hardware and first party wise, but so poorly third party (unless it's a set of crap mini-games). There's just not enough "real gamers" to even support great new titles like A boy and his blob.