I don't believe Power == Improvement. Better game experiences can happen with no increase in "power" at all. I'm having more fun on my DS than on any other system right now, and it's undoubtedly the weakest of all the current gaming hardware by any measure. Yet developers are using its unique abilities to come up with some potent gaming experiences. Sometimes more "power" just leads to more excess, and sparse "power" leads to the revitalization of whole genres that were all but abandoned a decade ago, stuff that I'm very happy to see come back around again.Jahaya said::lol You are one stern believer that power is only graphics?
Your examples are so limited. Undoubtedly someone will do something on the more powerful systems that I will want to play, something that's not possible on Wii or DS or PS2, my three primary gaming systems right now. But I also know stuff will actually be made for Wii and DS in the next few years (and perhaps even PS2) that I really want to play, stuff that simply won't get made on the bigger systems, because the size of investment and profile of the demographics on those machines make publishers avoid risks (or whatever other reason motivates publishers to create games for the less POWERFUL systems).