Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bolivar
The problem with the Wii U is that someone at Nintendo just didn't do their research, the specs weren't high enough to run high settings for the PC games that were coming out at the time, much less in the coming generation.
Except that, again, Nintendo is not focused on specs at the exclusion of all else. Nor can I ever recall them holding that stance, except possibly during the SNES era, when the huge difference in capability allowed for such extreme innovation in gaming.
Nintendo put plenty into its new console. It isn't the epitome of cutting edge hardware, but it runs games in High-Definition, and with constant and smooth frame rates. That's all I want from it, to be honest.
Quote:
Additionally, the game pad is an unnecessarily bundled peripheral driving up the price, now that Sony and Microsoft have figured out how to let you do the same thing with devices you already own.
What Microsoft device do I already own that could serve as either a secondary information screen or a handheld play device?
Quote:
And I don't know about the Wii U being more accessible to develop on since they still have the inferior multi platform versions and have yet to release anything remotely near the graphical level of Uncharted, Killzone, God of War, etc.
I haven't experimented a ton with the Wii U as yet, so my talk here is going to come from the Wii itself.
I acknowledge that it has inferior ports. It also has inferior hardware, and I never tried to deny that. However, the inferiority lies primarily in graphics, which does not ruin the quality of the game. Further, taken a step down to the Wii U's graphical capability is still going to leave the game at an impressive graphical level. I don't need my games to push the edge every single moment.
Quote:
Also, Vita's remote play is a native feature that works with all PS4 games out of the box. It's an underrated handheld; I initially snubbed it and bought a 3DS instead but after owning it for less than a month, my library is three or four times the size of my 3DS, much more diverse and refreshing, and between my bundle and PS+ I've yet to spend a dollar on a single title.
Good to know, I was only aware of PS3 cross-play. I look forward to taking advantage of the PS4 native play once I get the system.
I'm not saying that the Wii U is perfect, or that it is the best system out. I am saying, however, that it fulfills the requirements I have always looked for in being a "next gen" system.