Originally posted by EtherShock
I wouldn't call us thin. We are the generation that grew up on video games. We have the money to spend on games for the most part. Nintendo is playing the safe route. I can't blame them. However, they know that the Nintendo Generation will always come back for their first-party games. That is one thing that Sony and Microsoft lack. They've pretty much get the licenses covered though.
We are a thin wedge of society; wider than the very first consoles (thanks largely to the Ps opening up the adult market), but it's still only a small cross-section of society. When you think of the amount in our age group, and how many will have a disposable income for spending on games regularly, it's a hell of a tight market.
For one thing, there's a whole other gender to be tapped; which AFAIK
no-one has done, at least intentionally. From what I've read, the Nintendo DS might not be as powerful or impressive as the PSP, but it's accessibility has opened up its potential market to people not normally regarded or targeted as gamers.
If they get it right, Nintendo can make a stupendous amount of money - simply by making games more accessible and less 'hardcore'; just imagine if every filmmaker in the world was making solely Jerry Bruckheimer style films, and then someone came out with Finding Nemo and When Harry Met Sally (etc).
The assumption is still that gaming is a juvenile pasttime; if they manage to break that, then they've got a massive market and will help legitimise the perception of gaming as a form of mass entertainment the same as TV, music, cinema, etc.
Originally posted by neo_hermes
when you look at it from the front it looks familiar..
Reminds me somewhat of a SNES or NES.... it is ugly, though. At the moment, it's my preferred choice anyways; specs are better than the xbox360 (which is only a factor because they're out at more or less the same time), and IMO the games lineup will be more interesting. Plus I couldn't give a monkeys about online, especially online subscription based play.