Terrible machine imo. I only bought it for Bayonetta 2 so I did not regret it but.. yeah, what a half assed concept and lackluster library of good games.Lol just based on how it’s talked about by the people who had it I’m glad I never had a Wii U. It sounds awful. I’m glad the games got ported.
What current exclusive games, every good thing on the Wii U was ported awayIn a vacuum Xbox One. Looking at current exclusive games easily Wii U.
Xenoblade Chronicles X, Nintendo Land, Kirby Rainbow Curse, Pushmo World and Affordable Space Adventure for instance. Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate while not a true exclusive did have exclusive online multiplayer. Splatoon 1, while superseded by Splatoon 2 and 3 still has a loyal following.What current exclusive games, every good thing on the Wii U was ported away
There was a lack of good third party support, without the likes of PES, but even the Switch with record sales for a handheld doesn't even get the FTP eFootball so that's seemingly less of WiiU thing and more of a Nintendo thing; especially when games like Batman Oranges was by far the best version with the use of the WiiU tablet controller and games like the Wonderful 101 being amazing titles built around the system that even after porting don't deliver the full experiences, would make me say 3rd party support was more a mixed bag for the highs than 'no 3rd party support'. The limited support it got was excellent IMO.wii u
i mean, it sucked.
underpowered, controller the size of an office monitor, uncomfortable, no 3rd party support, like 5 good games, dumb name
but it's also like a handicapped puppy you cant help but love
the xbox one, on the other hand, was just a ran-over, week-old chicken sandwich
As a day 1 owner of the WiiU, I was never happier to sell a console after the generation was over. The gimmick never made sense, many Nintendo flagships like New Mario Bros. were either lazy rehashes or just completely stupid like Starfox Zero. I liked Bayonetta 2 and Mario Kart enough, but I think that's about it.
Never had a Xbox One, but the PS4 generation was easily among the strongest generations ever and Xbox One still got most of the 3rd party content, so that's the easy choice. I guess at the time it would have been annoying that you needed to wait longer for many Japanese 3rd party games, but at least they still arrived eventually.
The XBONE was a disaster but the third-party support/far more extensive game library and longer life span just make it an objectively superior system to the wii uBy the eighth gen, the console market had settled into just having its current big three players, meaning you wouldn’t expect there to be a lot of room left for variation with the consoles that do well and the ones that don’t, but…
Well, Nintendo and Microsoft fucked up just enough to bring us here. So let’s get into it.
The Wii U is Nintendo’s worst selling console of all time and widely considered to be one of the worst consoles in general. While it has a lot of merits to its name - Nintendo was trying some interesting things with the dual screen setup, the network functionality appears very interesting (particularly with hindsight), and it’s actually the nexus of the Switch idea Nintendo would utilize to such great effect literally in the exact same gen just four years later - it was a miserable console, abandoned by third parties and propped up by a panicking Nintendo who threw a lot of shit at it to keep it going. In spite of this, it managed a surprisingly stacked lineup of great exclusives, which gave it a respectable legacy but more importantly allowed Nintendo the leverage to launch the Switch with a ready made lineup of great games when the time came. The Wii U was not a good console, but its lineup and its successor both allow it a modicum of dignity.
The Xbox One had the easiest layup in history. The Xbox 360 had finally split the high end console market from Sony neatly in half. Microsoft and Xbox weren’t at the top yet but they had carved out half the market for themselves and had every chance to continue that momentum. Enter Xbox One. Underpowered and overpriced, the Xbox One is arguably responsible for every major issue Xbox suffers from to this day. While the system was salvaged over time thanks to some savvy revisions and the introduction of services like Game Pass, the initial and long term damage was done. In terms of games, the Xbox One actually did very well, getting pretty much every major third party multiplatform game of the era, plus several exclusives (at least initially), and a flurry of initial first party exclusives too. By the end, Xbox would be sharing all its games with PC permanently going forward, meaning no more exclusives, meaning the Xbox One’s overall legacy is a lineup of great games that can also be played on other systems - in other words, there’s nothing to buy an Xbox One for.
It’s actually astonishing that the same generation that gave us the PlayStation 4 and the Switch also gave us these two, but I mean, here we are. Of these two, which one do you think is the better one and why?
All day. Soft modding gives it the capability to play the library of GB, GBA, DS, SNES, NES, GCN, N64, it's the best way to play Wii titles, and you also have the great WiiU library. It's GOAT-tier for Nintendo consoles. There's probably other emulators it can run too and there's even a way to get GTA3 PC running on it.With some modification, WII U is quite the console.