Grampa Simpson
Banned
You're doing it wrong.Suzzopher said:Mario Kart will save 3DS!
Have to start with Zelda
Then Starfox
Then Mario Kart.
You're doing it wrong.Suzzopher said:Mario Kart will save 3DS!
Too early for that, the first "wait for x game" is Ocarina of Time.Averon said:Does the 3DS have its own chalk board yet?
Suzzopher said:Mario Kart will save 3DS!
Grampa Simpson said:You're doing it wrong.
Have to start with Zelda
Then Starfox
Then Mario Kart.
Sammy Samusu said:Too early for that, the first "wait for x game" is Ocarina of Time.
Joe Shlabotnik said:I know the DS was soft for quite a few months, but I didn't know it did that bad post-launch. If it's comparable to 3DS sales now, then the jury really is still out, since the software selection is so similar (couple of launch titles selling based on the novelty of the system, huuge dry spell shortly after, big guns releasing within a year.)
Obviously as much as it deserves.BlazingDarkness said:Nice to see 3ds selling well
demosthenes said:Haha, this sounds like the PS3 back in 06/07.
I wear my Nintendo jacket proudly. The only fix is a significant price drop. Get it down to $180 this summer, and the games that are slated for release and in development will carry it for years.zomgbbqftw said:eShop would be the first one, too many Nintendo avatar wielding members were going on about it as the fix.
Given how much the masses seem to love Mario Kart I can see it helping it's fortunes, but a steady string of content is needed.Father_Brain said:That's exactly the point. It's a pretty flawed analogy (Mario Kart alone has vastly more in the way of proven system-selling power than anything that PS3 fanboys ever put on that chalkboard), but Nintendo did leave itself open here.
This man is a genius.Grampa Simpson said:I wear my Nintendo jacket proudly. The only fix is a significant price drop. Get it down to $180 this summer, and the games that are slated for release and in development will carry it for years.
Grampa Simpson said:You're doing it wrong.
Have to start with Zelda
Then Starfox
Then Mario Kart.
Why would the month after a price drop have stronger sales than the first two weeks? It never works that way, especially without any software to compete with (lol) Duke Nukem.UberTag said:Factoring year-over-year variation:
Xbox 360: 270K (+39%)
Wii: 236K (-29.5%)
PlayStation 3: 177K (+15%)
The 3DS came in right about where it was expected to... although that won't stop the alarmists.
The Wii will make a strong push for 1st in June.
Thunder Monkey said:Given how much the masses seem to love Mario Kart I can see it helping it's fortunes, but a steady string of content is needed.
The announcement of Luigi's Mansion did make me tingle.Father_Brain said:Oh, no question. Going by Nintendo's E3 showing, it looks like that'll happen, but unfortunately for their summer sales, it apparently won't start until September.
zomgbbqftw said:eShop would be the first one, too many Nintendo avatar wielding members were going on about it as the fix.
Grampa Simpson said:I wear my Nintendo jacket proudly. The only fix is a significant price drop. Get it down to $180 this summer, and the games that are slated for release and in development will carry it for years.
It still works on a humor level.Somnid said:It doesn't work because Nintendo fans know that Zelda and Starfox aren't going to help. The PS3 thing was funny because it was Sony's inability to sell a game. Nintendo's been around long enough that we have certain sales expectations per franchise.
UberTag said:Factoring year-over-year variation:
Xbox 360: 270K (+39%)
Wii: 236K (-29.5%)
PlayStation 3: 177K (+15%)
The 3DS came in right about where it was expected to... although that won't stop the alarmists.
The Wii will make a strong push for 1st in June.
I don't know man.zomgbbqftw said:Nintendo can't cut the price too soon. It will be a death knell for the platform, people will just keep waiting for a price cut if they start cutting too early.
The first price cut will come mid 2012 IMO, they would lose too much customer goodwill and a lot of PR damage would be done to cut the price this close to launch.
In what way do you mean?Somnid said:It doesn't work because Nintendo fans know that Zelda and Starfox aren't going to help. The PS3 thing was funny because it was Sony's inability to sell a game. Nintendo's been around long enough that we have certain sales expectations per franchise.
I don't think it will have a big impact, but sales can only go up from here.chubigans said:Do some of you really believe that Zelda is going to affect 3DS sales? I don't see an N64 port moving the sales needle in the slightest.
Exactly.Quadrangulum said:Nintendo should keep its consoles below $300 and handhelds below $200. They're the only ones left that are going to launch new systems at these levels and I think this is critical for their continued success.
The only people who give it flak for an early price drop will be message board pundits and analysts like Pachter. For the consumer it will be become attractive where it previously wasn't. If they brought it down that low, they could probably also discontinue the DS Lite and DSi (not XL) to push the 3DS to the forefront.zomgbbqftw said:Nintendo can't cut the price too soon. It will be a death knell for the platform, people will just keep waiting for a price cut if they start cutting too early.
The first price cut will come mid 2012 IMO, they would lose too much customer goodwill and a lot of PR damage would be done to cut the price this close to launch.
zomgbbqftw said:Nintendo can't cut the price too soon. It will be a death knell for the platform, people will just keep waiting for a price cut if they start cutting too early.
The first price cut will come mid 2012 IMO, they would lose too much customer goodwill and a lot of PR damage would be done to cut the price this close to launch.
Thunder Monkey said:Given how much the masses seem to love Mario Kart I can see it helping it's fortunes, but a steady string of content is needed.
Quadrangulum said:Nintendo should keep its consoles below $300 and handhelds below $200. They're the only ones left that are going to launch new systems at these levels and I think this is critical for their continued success.
Yeah, even I was cockier than I should have been.Mr. B Natural said:I need to go back to the 3ds threads and see if people actually expected the 3ds to ever hit under 100k ever in its lifespan. Or I could just not waste my time and say no, of course not. Everyone thought nintendo was a least safe and golden with their portable market share and pull. Maybe not "rule the world" golden but good enough.
Glasses free 3d. Remember that selling point people? Wasn't that suppose to just wow us and make tons of the easily convinced fans and casual just buy their product? The DS pull? Nintendogs? Pilotwings? All those thrown in features (like they're doing again with the WiiU)? Nothing. Nothing yet at least.
Grampa Simpson said:The only people who give it flak for an early price drop will be message board pundits and analysts like Pachter. For the consumer it will be become attractive where it previously wasn't. If they brought it down that low, they could probably also discontinue the DS Lite and DSi (not XL) to push the 3DS to the forefront.
zomgbbqftw said:$249 3DS and $399 WiiU.
Just for some perspective, the PSP sold 59.4K units last May when it was still getting a semi-regular release schedule (as opposed to now when it can look forward to nothing but license ports and Madden).test_account said:Seeing the 3DS hardware numbers, i got some flashbacks to the PS3 vs GBA fights back in 2007. I wouldnt be surprised if the 3DS sold around what the PSP sold this month. Hopefully for Nintendo the 3DS will have more success once more games come out for it.
Simple math. Neither system has anything appealing to move hardware in June but the price drop has led to the Wii outselling the Xbox 360 since it gained traction with consumers around the middle of fiscal May Week 3. Sustain those gains (even with some demand decline) over a 5-week month versus the 10 or so days it had in May and all of a sudden the Wii gets a chance to crack the streak.Sho_Nuff82 said:Why would the month after a price drop have stronger sales than the first two weeks? It never works that way, especially without any software to compete with (lol) Duke Nukem.
I don't know.demosthenes said:I see this coming as well.
zomgbbqftw said:Nintendo can't cut the price too soon. It will be a death knell for the platform, people will just keep waiting for a price cut if they start cutting too early.
The first price cut will come mid 2012 IMO, they would lose too much customer goodwill and a lot of PR damage would be done to cut the price this close to launch.
Thunder Monkey said:I don't know.
I think one of their premiere handhelds selling under 100,000 units months out of launch will scare the shit out of them.
chubigans said:Do some of you really believe that Zelda is going to affect 3DS sales? I don't see an N64 port moving the sales needle in the slightest.
gerg said:I always love the idea that Nintendo's "gotten cocky", that they weren't aware of the downturn of Wii sales in US, Europe, and especially in Japan, and that Iwata hasn't spoken openly about their failure to keep the Wii's momentum going, and even in adequately explaining the value of the 3DS to consumers.
Nintendo obviously overestimated the appeal of the 3DS at launch, whether in overestimating the appeal of "glasses-less 3D" as a concept, the appeal of the software included with the 3DS, the appeal of the retail releases at launch, or a combination of all three. That doesn't mean that they're arrogant.
test_account said:In what way do you mean?
True, but the PSP got a pricedrop at the end of February, and in March it sold more than 119k as far as i know. Based on this pricedrop, i dont think that it is too unlikely that the PSP sold somewhere around 70k - 100k in May, but that will of course just be a guess until we get any official numbers.UberTag said:Just for some perspective, the PSP sold 59.4K units last May when it was still getting a semi-regular release schedule (as opposed to now when it can look forward to nothing but license ports and Madden).
Kiriku said:Well, isn't it the best-selling Zelda game ever in the US (or at least up there)? Also the first big, recognizable Nintendo IP being released for the 3DS, which will probably be beneficial when marketing the game.
I see, but what could Sony do to have sold the games better? Would a lot of marketing have made the game sold more (more as in that the extra money spent on extra adverticing would be profitable)? And how much did Sony expect these games to sell compared to what they sold?Somnid said:There were a bunch of promising franchises included in those lists that sold completely lackluster. They were successful enough to keep around but they were consistently beaten by competing games in the same month.