Since when is Nintendo Sega?
That's like saying Apple will fall apart because Blackberry is falling apart.
Ok, i think i'll elaborate and try to stay on topic, which is talking about what Nintendo has to gain or lose, pretending it actually does not affect us gamers.
Blackberry falling apart means more customers to companies like apple, it is a good thing for apple and the others and bad for blackberry.
In the case of Nintendo it's not whether Nintendo might fall apart because Sega did, it's more like Sega fell apart and look what happened! Now imagine the same happening to Nintendo.
Unlike what people may think Sega's saga has many similarities with what Nintendo is going through at the moment. Not only that, but Sega was in a better position if i may say.
Sega was at the time reigning supreme in the arcades, there's no denying this. They made a lot of money from arcades and the quality of their products was excellent. Even if someone could do a better product, something that was happening anyway, Sega was all about quality, longevity, service and support. Also at the time arcades, unlike now, were very popular.
At the other hand Sega had a home console that was unwanted to say the least, sales were not good, attach rate was not good either, people thought it was expensive for what it does and also they were dazzled with what Sony was promising. You know PS2 wasn't out yet and Sony was bombarding the media with CG quality images and videos claiming they were in-game footage, ofc poor DC could never reach this level of quality.
Gaming magazines and what was the internet back then were all about how they'll better keep their money for the better offer as DC was clearly underpowered and too expensive. They would argue that the controller is cumbersome and that it hosted a gimmick and that PS2 offered the better controller, it all sounded bad for poor Sega.
You know the rest of the story, Sega couldn't support hardware anymore, they became a publisher and with that they lost a lot of talent, both technicians and artists, who saw the sinking ship and left. After GC and the original XBOX came out for a time we were foolish enough to believe that it went ok for Sega, releasing sequels to their past games on former rival consoles and also some arcade ports, but the continued loss of hard income from selling hardware and the constant loss of personnel brought them to their knees, unable to make quality games for their existing IP's anymore and also to invest on research of new IP's and making them spend their own gold-chest to support the company until they had no other option than to sell themselves to a pachinko firm and just continue to publish works from other developers with games developed by them only now and then.
Nintendo now, also has quite a lot of money to support themselves for a time, but exiting the hardware business means that they'll have to lay off almost half their staff, this will be shocking for the rest of the employees that will try to abandon ship to save themselves. The loss of talent combined with the loss of income from hardware will make them create fewer and less diverse games as they will hit with their better known IP's, but in order to actually have any income from fewer games they will be forced to make yearly iterations of the same titles over and over, with limited staff and leaked talent, losing software quality in the process. In the end Nintendo will not be known for excellence but we'll be talking about the 'Mario Circle' every year when the next game is announced, which in turn will lead to the market abandoning them for good.
If by my previous post i was unable to convince you that it's gonna be bad from us, i hope with this one i will convince you that it's bad for Nintendo.
This post is pretty ironic considering your avatar. Perhaps they did not develop Bayonetta internally, but it is their IP. They published a lot of cool new IPs after they went third party.
Also, the Yakuza franchise was created after they went third party, correct?
Bayonetta is as much Sega's as the Total War series is, they didn't create any of it, they just published it. Publishing =/= developing.
You are right about Yakuza, it's been so long since we saw one on the West i actually forgot about it, seriously.