packy34
Member
My tinfoil hat theory is Sony and MS are doing mandatory installs to get the same result.
Nah. Installing games to a drive is multiple orders of magnitude better for performance and it's been a thing on PC since the dawn of gaming.
My tinfoil hat theory is Sony and MS are doing mandatory installs to get the same result.
I can see where Amiibos probably caught them off-guard, it was a new avenue they were getting into with making actual toys, they wanted to play it safe initially and avoid overshipping demand, and then when it was clear demand was there, there was a lag in recalibrating production.Did anyone really expect amiibos or the nes mini to really be such hot items? In a world where these emulated game systems are looked down upon or sold in drug stores as cheap last minute gift items? While I do get sick of not being able to get certain nintendo things at launch people need to calm down too. Scalpers know how nintendo operates and go out and buy up stock to resell on eBay because they know some sucker will buy those items marked up by 5x the cost. I fully expect the mini to be readily available eventually. Just like most amiibos are as well. They've continued to restock rarer ones. Hopefully pokemon moon and Sun is a sign that nintendo is more willing to go all out if they expect something to do well. Also I agree they should open preorders soon to gauge demand for the switch.
Nah. Installing games to a drive is multiple orders of magnitude better for performance and it's been a thing on PC since the dawn of gaming.
Unlike Mini NES not many fucks will be given.
"Special Edition" is code for "limited", so yes.
There it is then. Then i have no issue with those selling out if they're limited. Still doesn't excuse the Nintendo Classic Mini.
Here's the thing: manufactured scarcity depends on the object eventually being easy to acquire, to take advantage of its popularity. If this was on purpose, then stores should have been flooded with them on Black Friday. But Nintendo didn't ship any NES Classics to stores at all for Black Friday, not even a small number to keep people interested. So I'm under the impression that it's not on purpose, they just didn't make enough, didn't think they'd be nearly as popular as they are.
I would hope that Nintendo sees the buzz and hype for Switch and watches pre-orders to better gauge demand so this doesn't happen 3 1/2 months later, but Nintendo can be unpredictable. It's kind of worrisome, but I have a little hope. The Switch is a much more major release.
Most companies operate the same way, this is not a unique trait. And if they put the time and effort into market research then they would know that the mainstream demand for this thing was enormous. Ever since they announced it, people all around me who haven't played a video game in decades were saying they were excited to buy one, and now they're pissed they can't.
You can wipe out all of the profit margin from selling low cost hardware by flooding retail channels and having to do retailer buybacks/rebates and pay warehousing costs when things don't clear out.
The only way this is possible is if Nintendo actively ignores social media metrics for their products and does not have any online presence or engagement in those arenas, and that's absolutely not true.So I'm under the impression that it's not on purpose, they just didn't make enough, didn't think they'd be nearly as popular as they are.
The only way this is possible is if Nintendo actively ignores social media metrics for their products and does not have any online footprint, and that's absolutely not true.
Fuck him if he really said that. And here I thought he was doing a good thing.
Thank you.There is a very easy way to estimate the demand at launch. By doing pre-orders. It's not rocket science.
Well the entire video game industry is predicated on the concept that increased financial risk results in increased financial reward. Hence why consoles have long employed the "razors and blades" business model of moving systems at or below cost to make up the difference on game sales. Also evident in the ever escalating cost of AAA game development where bigger = better.
Same in the movie industry where production costs have risen steadily to fund major summer blockbusters that dominate the entire cinematic landscape.
Most media produced for mass consumption works on the concept that the more money you put into something the higher the profits on the other end will be, assuming it is a good product.
Nintendo clearly doesn't believe that or at least believes that isn't a viable strategy for them. They're probably right, but that trickles down to how they roll out products with a much more conservative eye towards initial manufactured numbers, total manufacturing capacity, and how quickly they want to meet demand in exchange for risking overproducing as demand dries up.
You're trying to match anecdotal evidence with quantifiable anticipated sales, that simply isn't a valid strategy for a company to go by. Even when companies market test products they assume a pretty healthy decline from people who say "yes, I'll buy that" to the number of people who would actually show up to buy it because there is a proven trend of this happening (same with people saying they'll vote, as another example of inherent dishonesty in polling). Nintendo miscalculated the NES Mini's demand but likely did so with sound reasoning at the core, just sound reasoning built around very conservative ideology.
Jim didn't say that. LordRaptor is taking quote out of the context from an old unrelated Jimquisition
This alone proves the intentional scarcity theory is bunk. Black Friday would have been the time to release the flood after the hype. Nintendo NES Classic lost the chance at beating out PS4/XB1/3DS in November.
Hold on,
From what I remember the only Nintendo consoles where demand wasn't met were the Wii and the NES Mini.
The Wii sold the fastest and most amount of units a console have ever ever sold, so I can let that pass.
I agree that the stock of the NES Mini is too low though, but as a whole this isn't something I would hold against Nintendo as it's hardly something they're in a position to pull off because the consoles weren't popular enough.
Not going to watch but people need to let go of the manufactured scarcity myth.
No one is doing this on purpose in 2016, there are a number of other complex factors that affect supply and demand. Failure to meet demand costs money and the 'free marketing' it gets is not worth loss of sales.
I knew this was gonna happen the minute Nintendo announced it. And so did most people aware of Nintendo's distribution practices
Super mario maker 3ds is releasing later this week isnt it?
He did say that, I have correctly transcribed and sourced it in this very topic.
You can claim he was just joking if you want, but that is what he said.
It's related because if you do a Jimquisition about the NES Mini being a rip-off and not worth the money when just downloading for free is much better, its a bit rich 6 months down the line complaining how the NES Mini was obviously going to be massive and Nintendo are obviously undershipping as a result.
Ah the old Nintendo is creating artificial demand conspiracy. Going strong since the 80s, so why break with tradition now.
Admittedly Nintendo needs to be called out for its poor planning though. I totally expext the NES mini to clutter retail shelves early next year. Similar to Amiibo. Such is the reality of a conservative company. Slow to react, slower to adapt.
I still don't understand. Would've been a novel, cheap Christmas present though. Which is probably the appeal. I'd play it once or twice then just store it on my bookshelfThere's actually a demand for NES classic? Lol
There's actually a demand for NES classic? Lol
Sorry, I don't fall for your lame tactics. This is not the subject at hand here. This issue of under-shipping is not limited to NES Mini, it has a long history with Nintendo and Jim's opinion about NES Mini has no relevance at all in the context. Like none. If Jim considers the NES Mini worthy or not doesn't make suddenly more of them appear in stock.
Tons of demand. Everyone I know in the right age window wants one. If you're in your late 30's or early 40s this thing is a lock.
Glad he also mentioned Pokemon Sun/Moon's delayed launch in Europe. That topic deserves an other Jimquisition on it's own, honstely.
Here's the thing: manufactured scarcity depends on the object eventually being easy to acquire, to take advantage of its popularity. If this was on purpose, then stores should have been flooded with them on Black Friday. But Nintendo didn't ship any NES Classics to stores at all for Black Friday, not even a small number to keep people interested. So I'm under the impression that it's not on purpose, they just didn't make enough, didn't think they'd be nearly as popular as they are. They probably based that off of Wii U VC sales numbers, and the knowledge that many gamers just go out and pirate the NES games they want to play.