Nintendo's Iwata: "I don't recall saying I'd resign."

The reactions to this thread didn't disappoint.

While past successes aren't going to "save" him, nobody here knows if he was ever in any "danger" to begin with. It's all been speculative (wishful) fanfiction because Iwata is somehow personally responsible for everything that people dislike about Nintendo right now.

Iwata is in charge, but Nintendo is more than one person. Additionally, the shareholders, you know, the people you want to fire Iwata? Those guys have input into Nintendo's direction too, amazingly enough. It's not as simple as people seem to think.
 
Nintendo is doing great on the 3ds side of things, sorry luigi, but 2013 is basicly the year od the 3ds, and almost all of the best games for the system have came out this year.Zelda and pokemon are going to destroy the ps4's and xbox 180's sales numbers, just you wait.
 
Something with graphic fidelity on-par with The PS4 and Xbone, and an IP other than Mario Kart or Smash with robust multiplayer that I'll play for more than three hours.
And if they're not going to come up with a new IP or something, I'd a game with a decent narrative that has character develop from game to game that will entice me to play the games that I feel haven't had any worthwhile gameplay innovations in nearly fifteen years.

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krypt0nian said:
Awesome! I guess that will sell consoles.

It does kinda, you know, indicate confidence
 
He was not talking about BC he is talking about a proper account system so if you ever loose, sell, or brick your system you can re-download those games you bought on a new one without jumping through hoops like Nintendo makes you do. It has nothing to do with BC.

"They're not doing it, so even though it's an AMAZING idea that could give us a bullet point that nobody has and it's actually super convenient, we're not gonna do it."


I am not saying Nintendo does not need a proper account system they do. I am pointing out that even with out a proper account system Nintendo is doing better then Sony or MS are at making sure I retain my digital purchases. I am not a huge fan of Digital for this reason. after PS4 was said to not support my PSN games I stopped buying them. I have a 60gig that Will die and I was holding out on the PS4 to fix that. I will be buying a new PS3 and PS2 long before a PS4 for this reason.

Oh and I do consider needing PS+ to upload my save to the cloud to redownload them on a new system jumping through hoops. Combined with the fact that I dont even know if that will work with my PS2 saves with the newer non BC models Which is the advice my Sony rep gave me.


I wouldn't say something that people have been clamoring for for YEARS is a "minor complaint". This is Nintendo we're talking about, they had a long history of releasing their systems in SEVERAL options.

Yes and Nintendo has a long history of not bringing nearly half the colors Japan get anywhere else. Someone that would refuse to buy a system due to its color despite having compelling software that interests them is petty. That said it is strange that there is no black model as for white those just get filthy as a handheld.

Make them only purchasable on Nintendo hardware but transferrable to IOS/Android? Even if not, they'd be opening the market to millions upon MILLIONS of devices to people who probably would never have bought Nintendo hardware to begin with.

There are probably millions of people out there that remember NES & SNES classics from growing up, but aren't much of a gamer anymore. "Oh my god, game X is available for my phone? I remember that when I was a kid! Bought!"

Nintendo is leaving money on the table.

Except that Nintendo sees Mobile as a major competitor to the 3DS. That would be like them supporting the Vita with VC games. Also just how many VC games would one person have to buy to make up the cost of them not buying a 3DS or WiiU? Offering there titles elsewhere would weaken there brand and they know it. I already have customers that ask where Mario, Donkey Kong or Pokemon are on PS3/360.

Oh they count, but how many of those are AAA titles with the Nintendo "spark" and charm infused in them? Not a whole lot. When people are clamoring for a new IP, they're asking for something on the same level as a new Mario or a new Zelda, with the same budget and same care going into the craft.

I find that both Dillon, Pushmo (for a puzzle game), HarmoKnight, Xenoblade and especially 101 have plenty of charm to them. I have not played the 2nd Dillon game yes that seems to have added more characters and such to the game. And there is no real way to make a new Mario or Zelda. They are literal legends. You cant manufacture that, devs have tried all gen to do that with Call of Duty Clones. It just does not work.

And the Wii gen did have new IPs, the Core ones were ignored while the casual ones took off. Wii Fit and Wii Sports were incredibly successful. Excite Tucks/Bots were not despite IMO being better then MK Wii.

Not to mention that we already have people (myself included) clamoring that Nintendo needs to give some of there current IP's more attention like F-zero and Starfox. Just how many companies put out the output Nintendo has been doing the past few years on the 3DS and WiiU? If I am counting right Nintendo is putting out over 20 games this year.
 
He may say he won't leave but if he doesn't change the company's direction he'll be inevitably forced to leave. Nintendo lost money for two years in a row, WiiU and 3DS had terrible launch sales and both of them made the company bleed money, this never happened before in all it's history and this situation has a lot do with Iwata's previous decisions and how he manage the company. He didn't properly managed to adapt fo HD development, hence the struggling from Nintendo studios. Anyone defending him because of his profits from Wii/DS is delusional, yet, a very profit-centric point though.

If Nintendo loose money for a third year in a row and WiiU fails to sell good numbers, he'll step down, for sure. He should have already left by the end of his last fiscal year. What's keep him from being booted are the shares he holds on the company, otherwise it would be very unlikely for him to keep his position.
 
I think by naming himself head of NoA he's readying for one final fight. If the Wii U is not selling this holidays I'm sure he'll be asked to step down. From Hokkaido, he was never really part of the inner Nintendo Kyoto-based circle. You'll see a power struggle coming up if Wii U continue to falter.
 
Image problem for you, maybe. The times have changed. Consoles aren't just for "gamers" anymore, you can thank the PS2 for starting that and the Wii for strengthening it. The market Nintendo wants doesn't give two shits about the WiiU's hardcore "image". I'm not even sure what that's supposed to mean, it's such a nebulous term. The nerds that dismiss Nintendo consoles outright just because it says "Nintendo" on the box are not suddenly going to change their tune because of a new "hardcore" IP or two. That ship has sailed, and there's no reason why Nintendo would even want to bother trying to bring it back.

royalan is right. WiiU does have an image problem right now. The gaming press highlighted WiiU for months as a "current-gen" machine, underpowered, no games for it. Third-parties dropped support for it, EA being the apex. THIS IS BAD. Nobody will buy a machine with such reputation.

By the way, care to explain what is the "market Nintendo wants doesn't give two shits about the WiiU's hardcore "image""? Who is this market? Elabore, please.
 
The reactions to this thread didn't disappoint.

While past successes aren't going to "save" him, nobody here knows if he was ever in any "danger" to begin with. It's all been speculative (wishful) fanfiction because Iwata is somehow personally responsible for everything that people dislike about Nintendo right now.

Iwata is in charge, but Nintendo is more than one person. Additionally, the shareholders, you know, the people you want to fire Iwata? Those guys have input into Nintendo's direction too, amazingly enough. It's not as simple as people seem to think.

There's plenty of reason to speculate he's in trouble outside of wishful fanfiction. They're losing money, they bungled the refresh of both their product lines, and the stock has gotten hammered. It would be weird if he weren't in trouble. He's the CEO of a publicly traded company. Nintendo's recent failures are his responsibility.
 
My general fear about the removal of Iwata is that his replacement sees value in the valueless (mobile in particular).

The second Nintendo gives in on these things is the second everything I love about Nintendo dies.
 
There's plenty of reason to speculate he's in trouble outside of wishful fanfiction. They're losing money, they bungled the refresh of both their product lines, and the stock has gotten hammered. It would be weird if he weren't in trouble. He's the CEO of a publicly traded company. Nintendo's recent failures are his responsibility.


Look who owns the shares in Nintendo. He's not in any danger of getting fired by some mysterious "shareholder". The company has huge cash reserves. They are not in danger of going tits up..
 
There's plenty of reason to speculate he's in trouble outside of wishful fanfiction. They're losing money, they bungled the refresh of both their product lines, and the stock has gotten hammered. It would be weird if he weren't in trouble. He's the CEO of a publicly traded company. Nintendo's recent failures are his responsibility.

He's a CEO of a publicly traded company of which controlling interest lies basically in the hand of one man in Kyoto.

People should take step back and tone it down a notch, no one is getting fired for just one year of loss, and the loss that year wasn't even that huge, it's like what? Half what they made the year before or something? Even with Wii U struggling, he also got Japan locked down with 3DS.
 
In fairness he never explicitly stated it and even then if he implied it before still not really surprising, I think he's there to stay for a good while.
 
Look who owns the shares in Nintendo. He's not in any danger of getting fired by some mysterious "shareholder". The company has huge cash reserves. They are not in danger of going tits up..

Here are the things I didn't mention in my post: a mysterious shareholder, cash reserves, nintendo going tits up. Do you have anything to say about the things i actually did mention?

He's a CEO of a publicly traded company of which controlling interest lies basically in the hand of one man in Kyoto.

People should take step back and tone it down a notch, no one is getting fired for just one year of loss, and the loss that year wasn't even that huge, it's like what? Half what they made the year before or something?

10% isn't a controlling interest. And I didn't say he was getting fired for one year of loss. I said "They're losing money, they bungled the refresh of both their product lines, and the stock has gotten hammered. It would be weird if he weren't in trouble." Do you seriously disagree with that statement?
 
Of course you didn't, Iwata, but it'll happen naturally if you don't adjust to the ever draining gaming dedicated handheld market and the modern console market. Be bold, Nintendo! Take risks! Go outside your comfort zone!
 
Of course you didn't, Iwata, but it'll happen naturally if you don't adjust to the ever draining gaming dedicated handheld market and the modern console market. Be bold, Nintendo! Take risks! Go outside your comfort zone!

Be careful "nintendo true fans" will attack you like they attack me in every thread. They insist there is no problem baghdad bob style
 
Be careful "nintendo true fans" will attack you like they attack me in every thread. They insist there is no problem baghdad bob style

Any horde will attack the one that stands outside the consensus; but that said, you, like me, often say inflammatory things (which is not the same as trolling: speaking only for myself, I always put the time and effort into elaborating on my positions) and we have to take some responsibility when people react. Of course people should always be addressing purely the POINTS being made and not the person making them, which is what can be really problematic at times in some topics. Have to be very vigilant to point this out to those who can't defend their points of view so resort to attacking the individual instead.
 
Of course you didn't, Iwata, but it'll happen naturally if you don't adjust to the ever draining gaming dedicated handheld market and the modern console market. Be bold, Nintendo! Take risks! Go outside your comfort zone!

Nintendo doesn't necessarily need to "take risks" as they need someone that actually plays and understands contemporary video games with some actual authority in their management structure. That could probably go a long way in resolving Nintendo's current demographic problems.
 
10% isn't a controlling interest. And I didn't say he was getting fired for one year of loss. I said "They're losing money, they bungled the refresh of both their product lines, and the stock has gotten hammered. It would be weird if he weren't in trouble." Do you seriously disagree with that statement?

a 10% interest in a company the size of nintendo is HUGE. i didn't even realize it was that big, i thought it was like 5%. i don't know how it works over there in japan but if it's similar to over here then the chance of anyone mobilizing without him would be near impossible. nintendo would sink before that happened if he was adamant about keeping things the way they were

Be careful "nintendo true fans" will attack you like they attack me in every thread. They insist there is no problem baghdad bob style

i liked your old avatar more it fit your clumsy posting style. now i don't know if you want me to take you serious or not
 
10% isn't a controlling interest. And I didn't say he was getting fired for one year of loss. I said "They're losing money, they bungled the refresh of both their product lines, and the stock has gotten hammered. It would be weird if he weren't in trouble." Do you seriously disagree with that statement?

Do you have any idea what 10% meant? Nintendo itself control hold another 10%. Then, you include non-voting stock and people who just don't vote.
 
Nintendo doesn't necessarily need to "take risks" as they need someone that actually plays and understands contemporary video games with some actual authority in their management structure. That could probably go a long way in resolving Nintendo's current demographic problems.

Outside of the account system (which I've said is a huge blunder on Nintendo's part), what would you say they need to do differently? I don't understand this "demographic problem" you're suggesting.
 
a 10% interest in a company the size of nintendo is HUGE. i didn't even realize it was that big, i thought it was like 5%. i don't know how it works over there in japan but if it's similar to over here then the chance of anyone mobilizing without him would be near impossible. nintendo would sink before that happened if he was adamant about keeping things the way they were

10% is a lot of weight to throw around. It is not a controlling interest, which is what the other guy said.

Do you have any idea what 10% meant? Nintendo itself control hold another 10%. Then, you include non-voting stock and people who just don't vote.

I'm pretty sure it means 1 out of every 10 shares. Do you know what controlling interest means?
 
10% is a lot of weight to throw around. It is not a controlling interest, which is what the other guy said.

a controlling interest doesn't necessarily require 51% of stock. like the other guy said, you have people who don't vote, etc, which reduce the numbers needed to have control.
 
Outside of the account system (which I've said is a huge blunder on Nintendo's part), what would you say they need to do differently? I don't understand this "demographic problem" you're suggesting.

Nintendo's image has always been and will always be "for everyone" (i.e. all age group safe).

Some people on a hardcore gaming forum sometimes want more blood and tits and shit.
 
Surprised that we haven't seen any account bets yet. Or are those not allowed anymore?

I know I'd be willing to put my account up to bet Iwata will still be CEO in a year (barring medical issues).
 
Even with a price drop that wouldn't happen.

This assumes that Wii U is doing all the leverage for that target.

3DS on the other hand had and still has some of it's biggest and most anticipated titles lined up this year, with a bunch of new hardware versions/bundles to go with them. I may be wrong about this, but I vaguely recall that it's been said that 3DS was to be Nintendo's main focus for this year.

I doubt they'll meet the target but depending on how everything phases out and/or if there's still some legroom for Wii U to recover, it's possible to not be far removed from that goal.
 
He's a CEO of a publicly traded company of which controlling interest lies basically in the hand of one man in Kyoto.

People should take step back and tone it down a notch, no one is getting fired for just one year of loss, and the loss that year wasn't even that huge, it's like what? Half what they made the year before or something? Even with Wii U struggling, he also got Japan locked down with 3DS.

Japan's "locked down," but he's taken Nintendo's global presence and damn-near torpedoed it into toward irrelevancy.

Frankly, I don't know why people focus so much on the two years of loss Iwata's responsible for (although, when you consider that Nintendo has been profitable all this time, those two years of loss are pretty significant.). That's not the most damning thing. A decision to fire Iwata is not going to come from two years loss alone. Rather, it will be the board looking at that loss, and at how Iwata has set up the company to perform going into the future.

And, honestly, that's where the picture gets WORSE for Iwata (and why I think he needs to go ASAP). He hasn't just lost Nintendo short-term money, I'm afraid he's positioned Nintendo in an industry gray area where they'll never again be a competitive, dominant force outside of their own increasingly shrinking bubble.

Iwata has just run Nintendo so conservatively. Too conservatively. Nintendo's missed the opportunity to get in on the ground floor with so many dominant technologies and trends (online and robust content ecosystems, HD development, western gaming culture, etc.). Iwata neutered NoA and consolidated Nintendo's development presence to Japan JUST as the gaming nexus was shifting to the West, and now Nintendo has next to ZERO clout with the western development houses that make the most in-demand games, resulting in 3rd party support being the WORST it has ever been for a Nintendo console. This is made worse by the fact that Nintendo has few-to-no answers for these types of in-demand western gaming experiences in its own first party lineup-- and this is thanks to Iwata's completely insular, Japan-centric thinking. People attempt to gloss over Iwata's failures by pointing out their progressive policies with indie developers, but you can't count on fucking indie games to save a platform, and in just a few short weeks both Sony and MS have amended their policies to match and completely stolen their thunder on that front, too.

So, if I'm an investor, I'm not focusing on the two years of loss. I'm focusing on the future, and wondering just where the hell Nintendo as a company can go under a man as conservative, insular, and lacking of vision as Iwata after the success of the Wii/DS.

The answer, as we're discovering, is nowhere but down.
 
This assumes that Wii U is doing all the leverage for that target.

3DS on the other hand had and still has some of it's biggest and most anticipated titles lined up this year, with a bunch of new hardware versions/bundles to go with them. I may be wrong about this, but I vaguely recall that it's been said that 3DS was to be Nintendo's main focus for this year.

I doubt they'll meet the target but depending on how everything phases out and/or if there's still some legroom for Wii U to recover, it's possible to not be far removed from that goal.

Sorry I meant the 9.5 million WiiU's thing.

When's the last time Nintendo's met their 3DS expectations? Haven't they always reduced them as the year went on?
 
Japan's "locked down," but he's taken Nintendo's global presence and damn-near torpedoed it into toward irrelevancy.

Frankly, I don't know why people focus so much on the two years of loss Iwata's responsible for (although, when you consider that Nintendo has been profitable all this time, those two years of loss are pretty significant.). That's not the most damning thing. A decision to fire Iwata is not going to come from two years loss alone. Rather, it will be the board looking at that loss, and at how Iwata has set up the company to perform going into the future.

And, honestly, that's where the picture gets WORSE for Iwata (and why I think he needs to go ASAP). He hasn't just lost Nintendo short-term money, I'm afraid he's positioned Nintendo in an industry gray area where they'll never again be a competitive, dominant force outside of their own increasingly shrinking bubble.

Iwata has just run Nintendo so conservatively. Too conservatively. Nintendo's missed the opportunity to get in on the ground floor with so many dominant technologies and trends (online and robust content ecosystems, HD development, western gaming culture, etc.). Iwata neutered NoA and consolidated Nintendo's development presence to Japan JUST as the gaming nexus was shifting to the West, and now Nintendo has next to ZERO clout with the western development houses that make the most in-demand games, resulting in 3rd party support being the WORST it has ever been for a Nintendo console. This is made worse by the fact that Nintendo has few-to-any answers for these types of in-demand western gaming experiences in its own first party lineup-- and this is thanks to Iwata's completely insular, Japan-centric thinking. People attempt to gloss over Iwata's failures by pointing out their progressive policies with indie developers, but you can't count on fucking indie games to save a platform but in just a few short weeks both Sony and MS have amended their policies to match and completely stolen their thunder on that front, too.

So, if I'm an investor, I'm not focusing on the two years of loss. I'm focusing on the future, and wondering just where the hell Nintendo as a company can go under a man as conservative, insular, and lacking of vision as Iwata after the success of the Wii/DS.

The answer, as we're discovering, is nowhere but down.

Replace a few words and we can make this post into 2003. Or 1998. Almost word for word.
 
This thread is full of angry man-childs complaining about things they have a lack of understanding of.
This is the worst. Nintendo threads on this board generally end up being the worst
 
*turns head to camera* "I don't recall saying I'd resign." *winks*

IWATA IS BACK IN
PRESIDENT 2: WII U BOOGALOO
COMING NEXT YEAR
PLEASE UNDERSTAND.
 
Japan's "locked down," but he's taken Nintendo's global presence and damn-near torpedoed it into toward irrelevancy.


You know, I agree with that. Along with Iwata and gang's recent interviews it just shows that they don't care what other people think and are running Nintendo like an old boy's club.

I'm alright with Nintendo heading into the direction they're in but they're slowly marching towards a future where Nintendo doesn't equal gaming anymore and I'm afraid that Nintendo's legacy would be lost.
 
Ah, the old "we're not going to fail in the future because we've succeeded in the past!" excuse.

You simply can't accurately project anything into the future, whether that's a resurgence upward or... what you're projecting (i.e. down into irrelevance).
 
You simply can't accurately project anything into the future, whether that's a resurgence upward or... what you're projecting (i.e. down into irrelevance).

Based on the facts as they are now, with two failed launches under his belt and a general ignorance when it comes to what makes games sell in the largest global markets that's AREN'T Japan, it's much more of a leap to predict some sort of future where Iwata completely justifies the Wii U AND himself as CEO than it is to predict that Nintendo is in trouble unless they make some drastic alterations going forward.
 
Replace a few words and we can make this post into 2003. Or 1998. Almost word for word.

How could you say the same things in 2003? You couldn't complain about the long-term direction of the company in 2003 when Iwata had just succeeded Yamauchi in 2002.

As for 1998, if you warned against the direction of the company then, maybe Gamecube wouldn't have done so poorly.

All situations are not created equal.

DjRoomba said:
This thread is full of angry man-childs complaining about things they have a lack of understanding of.
This is the worst. Nintendo threads on this board generally end up being the worst

Well, this raises the discourse.
 
Great post Royalan.

Nah, Pie has a problem with the current Nintendo management and the direction it has taken of late [in the post Yamauchi Nintendo]. I have a certain amount of sympathy with that viewpoint.

Glad someone gets it. I'm not against a label, after all, Yoshi's Island and Super Metroid are some of my all time favourite of the evers, with Mario Galaxy pretty darn far up there too.

Iwata and Miyamoto however are done. Time and time again now over the end of the Wii's life, the beginning of the 3DS, and now the WiiU, they've shown they have no cohesive plan whatsoever and no clue where the rest of the industry is going.

Iwata assigning himself as the American CEO was just another example of "not getting it", when it was clear that what Nintendo needed most was a new westerner given a position of carte blanche to start chasing the shit the Japanese arm is finding it difficult to comprehend. Instead its the same guy and the third party situation is at an ALL TIME low.

When I read interviews from a confused sounding Miyamoto admitting there are staff members that would like to be making new IP but nope, its frustrating. All the more when he echoes the "HD development is hard who knew" please understand's. Good Managing job there Mr Manager!

But then on the same side I KNOW theres incredible talent at EAD, from the people that worked on Mario Galaxy, and Sakurai who is an endless bundle of energy who I'd much rather got to work on more projects like Kid Icarus than get plonked on the Smash factory again.
 
This thread is full of angry man-childs complaining about things they have a lack of understanding of.
This is the worst. Nintendo threads on this board generally end up being the worst

It's really frustrating, as I do think there's a lot of interesting discussion to be had about Nintendo in general, but you're right. I'm trying to stay away from Nintendo threads, but after the fanfiction in the last "Iwata might retire!!!111" thread, it was fun to see that shut down and look at the responses from some of the key players.

Edit:

Iwata assigning himself as the American CEO was just another example of "not getting it", when it was clear that what Nintendo needed most was a new westerner given a position of carte blanche to start chasing the shit the Japanese arm is finding it difficult to comprehend. Instead its the same guy and the third party situation is at an ALL TIME low.

Now, I could be mistaken, but I don't recall him assigning himself the position ala Harkin from Horrible Bosses. What's the story here?
 
When I read interviews from a confused sounding Miyamoto admitting there are staff members that would like to be making new IP but nope, its frustrating. All the more when he echoes the "HD development is hard who knew" please understand's. Good Managing job there Mr Manager!

But then on the same side I KNOW theres incredible talent at EAD, from the people that worked on Mario Galaxy, and Sakurai who is an endless bundle of energy who I'd much rather got to work on more projects like Kid Icarus than get plonked on the Smash factory again.

I agree, where are the new Miyamoto, Aonuma, Sakamoto and Sakurai and etc etc.

Nintendo has the most talented staff in the entire industry with many developers having their childhood dream be joining Nintendo. Why isn't Nintendo putting the spotlight on potential new developers with potential new IPs and to build them up as the next big thing?

Rather than let the old gang take all the spotlight, give the fresh new blood a chance at developing a big title and not a eshop throwaway.
 
Now, I could be mistaken, but I don't recall him assigning himself the position ala Harkin from Horrible Bosses. What's the story here?

http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=545992

Prime time for a new player to be hired and sort Nintendo's Western side out. Instead Iwata jumps in. Oh and I guess getting rid of Reggie would be a pretty good move as well, since he's either too afraid to say "what the fuck are you doing" in meetings, or is just as dumb as bricks.

On the flipside, when people like Dan Adelman are given a bit more power (and Adam Boyes on Sony's side) magical things happen. So its not all doom and gloom, there are talented forward thinking people in Nintendo, but the current top 3 (Iwata, Miyamoto, Reggie) are not them.
 
Japan's "locked down," but he's taken Nintendo's global presence and damn-near torpedoed it into toward irrelevancy.

I largely agree with this post. I think the last 3-4 years have positioned Nintendo towards a future where they have little western interest, let alone support.

Placing yourself outside of the competition can work on some occasions, especially when the competition is destroying itself, but Nintendo's now in a weird ghetto in terms of media coverage, hype, fanbase cultivation, and western-appeal. They haven't shorn up the holes in their lineup (FPS, sports), in spite of the fact that third-parties aren't there anymore. And they haven't focused on the kinds of comprehensive online multiplayer experiences the rest of the world currently induldges in.

And, the thing is, even if they went to work trying to reverse this problem now, it would take the better part of a generation or two before they could correct it. Hell, they might fall behind on some other, newer front, in the meantime.

And, just anecdotally, when I was a kid, Nintendo was synomous with games. When I talk to a child now, I'm lucky to find one who doesn't cite Halo or COD as his favorite game or the Xbox as his favorite console. I wonder if Nintendo is growing or even refreshing the ranks of the faithful, or is just content with riding a shrinking proportion of fans for the time being. Are they creating the kind of nostalgia/attachment I still feel towards them in younger gamers, or are they merely creating "fun" but unmemorable diversions?
 
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=545992

Prime time for a new player to be hired and sort Nintendo's Western side out. Instead Iwata jumps in. Oh and I guess getting rid of Reggie would be a pretty good move as well, since he's either too afraid to say "what the fuck are you doing" in meetings, or is just as dumb as bricks.

On the flipside, when people like Dan Adelman are given a bit more power (and Adam Boyes on Sony's side) magical things happen. So its not all doom and gloom, there are talented forward thinking people in Nintendo, but the current top 3 (Iwata, Miyamoto, Reggie) are not them.

The real issue for NoA is that Nintendo never sufficiently replaced Howard Lincoln, he was a real big hitter in the corporate world and made NoA a successful division. Reggie is just a lightweight idiot in a suit with a couple of slogans for the good times. By this point Howard Lincoln would have forced Yamauchi to take action in the US to revive flagging sales and revenue. I don't think Reggie really has any power whatsoever.

On the Sony side, they have their Howard Lincoln. Jack Tretton does a very, very decent job at SCEA, IMO he drove the no-DRM movement internally at SCEA and he has allowed the US studios to flourish while also letting go of dead weight. SCEA's output is so far above that of SCEJA and SCEE it's not even funny any more. Jim Ryan needs pull his finger out and get SCEE's house in order or I think he is on his way out.
 
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