Nintendo questions traditional five-year console

Pigwooly

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
May 1, 2007
Messages
370
Trophies
0
Website
Visit site
XP
214
Country
United States
I think this is the quote square is talking about. Although I'm not sure where it's from or if it's real. Says might be the last one, not will be. Companies never confirm things, they always leave wiggle room. I have to say though, the idea that the Gamecube or the 360 or whatever systems we have 50 years from now, are anywhere near the limit of what we can do technically is a laughable and absurd idea. Iwata makes me shake my head in shame.

Gamecube may be Nintendo's last console. This was the shock news that was revealed at a analyst meeting yesterday by recently appointed Nintendo boss Satoru Iwata.

In talking about Ninty's future direction, Iwata said that the company would focus on making better games and expanding its share of the games market as opposed to designing ever-more powerful consoles.

"We're reaching the limits of how far we can appeal to consumers by boosting the machine's performance or providing more compelling graphics and sound," he said. "I feel like a chef cooking for a king who's full."

This is not to say that he's not ambitious for Gamecube though, saying that Nintendo intend to shift a staggering 50 million Cubes by March 2005.

The company recently announced annual profits of 106 billion yen ($849 million), an increase of 10% from the previous year, although Iwata expressed concern over the console war.

"Price cuts in software could destroy the game industry," he said. "The effort to produce machines with better technology has reached its limit. If things continue, they may lead to the decline of the entire games industry."
 

Ace Gunman

~••Lucky҉Shot••~
Former Staff
Joined
Apr 17, 2003
Messages
6,380
Trophies
0
Age
36
Location
Wassamatta U
Website
www.gbatemp.net
XP
611
Country
Canada
In talking about Ninty's future direction, Iwata said that the company would focus on making better games and expanding its share of the games market as opposed to designing ever-more powerful consoles.

"We're reaching the limits of how far we can appeal to consumers by boosting the machine's performance or providing more compelling graphics and sound," he said. "I feel like a chef cooking for a king who's full."

This is not to say that he's not ambitious for Gamecube though, saying that Nintendo intend to shift a staggering 50 million Cubes by March 2005.

The company recently announced annual profits of 106 billion yen ($849 million), an increase of 10% from the previous year, although Iwata expressed concern over the console war.

"Price cuts in software could destroy the game industry," he said. "The effort to produce machines with better technology has reached its limit. If things continue, they may lead to the decline of the entire games industry."

Actually, I think whoever wrote that article may have mistaken his comments. Because everything he mentioned came true with the Wii. They have been focusing on software and expanding the market, they have stopped trying to create better graphics and better sound with each console, etc. I think he may have just been foreshadowing what we know now as the companies current direction.
blink.gif
 

square

The Professor
Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2002
Messages
1,353
Trophies
0
Age
42
Website
Visit site
XP
182
Country
United States
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/TECH/fun.game....idg/index.html

-It's not quite the article I was looking for, but it states nintendo's goals to to develop software over hardware. I know there is a quote in which nintendo (or a representive from) states that they plan to have gamecube be thier last console.

Edit- Found it

Gamecube may be Nintendo's last console. This was the shock news that was revealed at a analyst meeting yesterday by recently appointed Nintendo boss Satoru Iwata.

In talking about Ninty's future direction, Iwata said that the company would focus on making better games and expanding its share of the games market as opposed to designing ever-more powerful consoles.

"We're reaching the limits of how far we can appeal to consumers by boosting the machine's performance or providing more compelling graphics and sound," he said. "I feel like a chef cooking for a king who's full."

This is not to say that he's not ambitious for Gamecube though, saying that Nintendo intend to shift a staggering 50 million Cubes by March 2005.

The company recently announced annual profits of 106 billion yen ($849 million), an increase of 10% from the previous year, although Iwata expressed concern over the console war.

"Price cuts in software could destroy the game industry," he said. "The effort to produce machines with better technology has reached its limit. If things continue, they may lead to the decline of the entire games industry."

http://www.gamesradar.com/news/default.asp...3630&pagetype=2

and another link

http://www.megagames.com/news/html/console...edtogames.shtml
 

leetdude_007

Official GBAtemp Assassin That Has Never Killed An
Member
Joined
Nov 25, 2006
Messages
996
Trophies
0
Age
17
Website
Visit site
XP
167
Country
United States
NES was definitely more than 5 years, about a decade. Then Sega came by with a bit of graphic muscle. The super nintendo stole the show and now I have an SNES sitting in my living room. Still kicking.
 

CockroachMan

Scribbling around GBATemp's kitchen.
Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2006
Messages
3,887
Trophies
0
Age
38
Location
Brazil
Website
www.homembarata.com.br
XP
707
Country
Brazil
The Game Boy lasted a long time.. but that was thanks to Pokemon! The Game Boy was already sinking when Pokemon was launched, and it made the system rise again and gave Nintendo motivation to work on the Game Boy Color and GBA. The Virtual Boy was supposed to be the Game Boy's successor.

NES was up for 6 or 7 years before Nintendo came up with the SNES.. The Atari 2600 had more than 10 years before it was "dead". The PSX also had a long run, more than 7 years I think.

And we can't consider the PS2 "dead" yet, it's still selling very well, and it's still getting new games, mostly because how easy it is to make a port of a Wii game to it, you could say that the Wii is keeping the PS2 alive.
 

Osaka

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
May 25, 2007
Messages
823
Trophies
0
Age
28
Location
Ragol
Website
Visit site
XP
292
Country
United States

hova1

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2007
Messages
689
Trophies
0
Website
Visit site
XP
216
Country
Gambia, The
i think they keep the Wii and DS together for a long time. one reason is that many people own a DS or Wii and they just cant afford making a new console thats not going to more succesfull then the Wii or DS
 

Foie

That one guy
Member
Joined
Jun 15, 2006
Messages
867
Trophies
0
Age
33
Location
Clackamas, Oregon
Website
Visit site
XP
366
Country
United States
There is no way that Nintendo would drop the Wii anytime soon. Even after a year from the Wii's release, it is still difficult to find one on a store shelf (unless yo walk into a store the morning they get a shipment). The Wii is an huge success around the world, so it would be business idiocy to drop it. It's common sense.
 

CockroachMan

Scribbling around GBATemp's kitchen.
Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2006
Messages
3,887
Trophies
0
Age
38
Location
Brazil
Website
www.homembarata.com.br
XP
707
Country
Brazil
It's hard to know what Nintendo can do for their next systems, I don't think that they'll just put better graphics like people used to do before (and Sony and MS still do), Nintendo will try to do something different again, and if they don't they will be contradicting everything that they've been saying in the last years.

And I think it's really hard to do something better than the DS and the Wii.. but, I also think that something new can always be made.

"Everything that can be invented has been invented."
-- Charles H. Duell, an official at the US patent office, 1899.
 

Zaago

Active Member
Newcomer
Joined
Nov 9, 2002
Messages
32
Trophies
0
Website
Visit site
XP
196
Country
Edit- Found it

Gamecube may be Nintendo's last console. This was the shock news that was revealed at a analyst meeting yesterday by recently appointed Nintendo boss Satoru Iwata.

In talking about Ninty's future direction, Iwata said that the company would focus on making better games and expanding its share of the games market as opposed to designing ever-more powerful consoles.

"We're reaching the limits of how far we can appeal to consumers by boosting the machine's performance or providing more compelling graphics and sound," he said. "I feel like a chef cooking for a king who's full."

This is not to say that he's not ambitious for Gamecube though, saying that Nintendo intend to shift a staggering 50 million Cubes by March 2005.

The company recently announced annual profits of 106 billion yen ($849 million), an increase of 10% from the previous year, although Iwata expressed concern over the console war.

"Price cuts in software could destroy the game industry," he said. "The effort to produce machines with better technology has reached its limit. If things continue, they may lead to the decline of the entire games industry."Â


You did not read what Ace Gunman post two post above your, did you?

Actually, I think whoever wrote that article may have mistaken his comments. Because everything he mentioned came true with the Wii. They have been focusing on software and expanding the market, they have stopped trying to create better graphics and better sound with each console, etc. I think he may have just been foreshadowing what we know now as the companies current direction.
blink.gif
 

Pigwooly

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
May 1, 2007
Messages
370
Trophies
0
Website
Visit site
XP
214
Country
United States
It's hard to know what Nintendo can do for their next systems, I don't think that they'll just put better graphics like people used to do before (and Sony and MS still do), Nintendo will try to do something different again, and if they don't they will be contradicting everything that they've been saying in the last years.

And I think it's really hard to do something better than the DS and the Wii.. but, I also think that something new can always be made.

"Everything that can be invented has been invented."
-- Charles H. Duell, an official at the US patent office, 1899.

In terms of hard to do something better, it may be hard to do something more innovative, but better will be easy. When it's time for new systems, it'll be easy to make it at least look better because of natural hardware advances and the next console will surely be HD which will be nice, but yeah Nintendo's a bit of a loose cannon.

They've always done crazy things (Powerpad, Virtual Boy, GB Camera, that Barcode scanner thing that was only in Japan, the DS, the Wii). Some of their experiments are complete failures (Virtual boy) but lately it's been working out for them so I bet they'll try something weird again. Nintendo will have had more practice with the online stuff, so they'll likely do better at that next time around. Maybe their crazy thing they do next time will be all about awesome online interactivity. Or maybe you'll play the games by smashing your skull into an impact sensor. Who knows.
 
M

mario5555

Guest
the ps2 lasted for a good 7 years IMO till it started to stink

4 years is average life for a console

The only company to do that is MS, the Xbox lasted a little more than 3 1/2 years. And only because they killed it prematurely to launch the 360.

I applaud Nintendo AND Sony for wanting to stretch the longevity of their systems. I'd love to see the PS3 and Wii make it 10 and 5+ (respectively) and it can be done, it's all up to the competition (which is what happened this time, btw) Nintendo was quite happy making new GC games before they had to port them over to Wii and change development as well (I'm talking about GC-only games that got turned into Wii-clusive games, because they had to launch the new system before they were ready (or really wanting to do so)

And there was a lot of great games released on PS2 this year, with a few more big names still coming in the next 6-8 months, so if anything is starting to stink, its someone's taste is all.
cool.gif


I'm all for super long console cycles, I don't like shelling out major green for new systems, and those that do, hell give me your money, I can do a lot more with it than you can, if you like pissin' it away so much. I like having shiny new systems, I just don't like the price tags attached to them, mainly because I like keeping my money longer is all, or being able to spend it on more games to play.

Here's hoping, but we'll not see the next new systems from Nintendo until DS and Wii start losing steam and that isn't looking like it's happening any time soon, now is it...
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum

General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    SylverReZ @ SylverReZ: @E1ite007, I just found this randomly.