You've mischaracterised my post. It's not my favourite console ever I but have one hooked up right now (I was playing Indiana Jones, which is a buggy mess but I'm a sucker for Indy). I'm just explaining why I think it is less desirable for people overall, which is a hard fact based on game prices.
Feel free to come up with an alternative explanation.
He's basically pigeonholing the Xbox as "the system with a bunch of shitty Western games," which ignores three important things:
No, I'm saying that's who it was aimed at, and mostly sold to, and therefore it has a higher percentage of less committed gamers who would be less likely to revisit old consoles. Nothing to do with actual quality, just stats. I think its positioning was less likely to create long-term fans of that particular hardware product. I think the 360 will have a much longer lasting legacy.
Not all of the western games on the system were garbage. There were a lot of throwaway titles and games that were better on PC, yes, but there were also gems like Crimson Skies, MechAssault, Unreal Championship 2, etc. And the notion that games like Splinter Cell are worthless now because there are newer games similar to it is ridiculous. You could apply logic to Chrono Trigger or Super Metroid, too, and nobody would argue it would make any sense.
Super Metroid has more value today as a standalone product than an online shooter or games that were primarily famous for their high-end graphics.
Yes of course there were classics as well, but they were not the main sellers of the system, hence have less fans. The main sellers of the GameCube (Mario, Zelda, Smash etc) still have huge fanbases today, particularly in retro circles. I think the type of person who buys Need for Speed type games every year doesn't care to go back as often.
I don't think anyone is playing the Medal of Honor or Need for Speed etc releases on Gamecube either. But those were among the biggest sellers on Xbox. There are exceptions of course (I still play Burnout 3).
The Japanese-developed games were the real highlights as far as exclusives go. While it was marketed as a Western-centric box, anyone who's into retro gaming knows the real reason to care about the Xbox is stuff like Ninja Gaiden Black, Panzer Dragon Orta, Jet Set Radio Future, Phantom Dust, etc. And those aren't particularly obscure games, either. Definitely not "sideline items."
This is true, but once again doesn't seem to be enough to make it a system people want to get into as a retro machine.
3) It has the best version of a lot of good multiplatform games. If you're into the gen 6 console's offerings and want to play basically... anything that was on all 3 systems, 95% of the time, the best version is going to be on Xbox.
True again, but still evidently not enough.
The point about it being a dead-end system doesn't make sense either. The lack of a decent Saturn emulator for years didn't stop that system from being desirable.
Dead end + western focused + PC versions or upgraded re-releases of many of the great games.
Saturn is dead end + Japanese focused + you can't get those games anywhere else.
The bit about it being a big ugly box is just dumb.
That bit is personal taste, I literally have one plugged in right now and it is huge and noisy and yes ugly. It's the largest, heaviest console I own (never had an original grill PS3 which is comparable). It's definitely not something appeals to hardware fetishism like some consoles, it's not something likely to want to be displayed. There are other consoles in this category too - the Saturn isn't particularly nice looking ether, especially the plan front. The Wii is completely nondescript and I therefore have no attachment to its design either, and I doubt many other people do either. I find the US SNES hideous.
But damn I love the original Mega Drive, the Dreamcast, the PSone, the original PC Engine, the GameCube - iconic looking and/or nicely engineered machines.
Capitalizing on it by concluding that the Nintendo's systems are timeless while the Xbox was made for dudebros is just icing on the cake
I was trying to say Nintendo's games were attempts to be timeless, not the system. Though the Gamecube is a particularly nicely engineered box.
I personally enjoyed Splinter Cell 3 for the fancy graphics when it came out, but now it's not that good looking. I also enjoyed Wind Waker for the graphics when it came out, and it is still god looking.