Lee-yoshi Wrote:Just goes to show what a load of b*****ds Nintendo of Europe are, charging us over £40 more for the console, what a load of... wii...
Nice to hear it's gonna be region free though ^_^
Sorry chaps, the
Wii is now not region free (because if it was we would import it wia Lik-Sang and screw over the UK retailers who would then drop the console faster than the Gamecube).
As a parent and also money provider for my household, I feel that the Wii is unjustifiably expensive for such a limited device. It has no DVD/CD capabilities
unlike the the other two companies, it has no internal Hard Drive of any real note (512mb ha ha ha), it comes only in the colour of white with no chnageable faceplate (clashing with my black/silver hardware).
It does have some Internet browsing abilities, but my computer with its keyboard is far more versatile.
It has a weather channel - that must surely be more important and useful than DVD playback.
It has Avatars - oooh gee, I'm so excited! Surely this is much more useful than say 3GB internal memory, I'll settle for 512mb.
It comes with a collection of uninventive sports titles which no doubt will only have a lasting appeal as multi-player titles. You also get only one controller so scratch up another £45 if you actually want to play the games as Nintendo intended (It's called Wii because it's all about you and me but only you can play it at the moment unless you line my pocket with enough money to get LOZ:TP and still have change).
It's aimed at attracting the non-gamer market yet fails to have a consumer friendly price tag. I'd estimated £150 would have to be the highest chargeable price before the non-gamers start looking at it as an expensive toy rather than a bit of interactive fun.
Its best launch title is a slightly re-jigged Gamecube game with different controls and a wide screen option. And to think Nintendo held back LOZ:TP for a year while Gamecube owners defected to Sony and MS so they could actually play games. (I'm not criticising LOZ, I'm having a go at the idiots in Japan who run Nintendo).
Well, I've had to make a lot of adjustments. I've gotten used to the Wiimote, accepted that the console would be of a much lower power than the competitors (which has cost me RE5). I've had to put up with the name change that was once revolutionary but is now a schoolboys joke. I had to accept that the Wiimote was not rechargeable so I'd have to invest in rechargeable batteries. i had to accept that I wasn't going to be able to get rid of the cheap nasty DVD player in my bedroom.
When Nintendo first announced the Wii I was sceptical. Now I'm telling my kids that they shouldn't look forward to a Wii or a PS3.
The Xbox360 may cost more, but it offers more of what I want and is better value (MS sell it at a loss as compared to Nintendo selling at a profit). If I want Nintendo I'll stick to the DS.