Plinko
Wildcard berths that can't beat teams without a winning record should have homefield advantage
bgassassin said:
Oh. Yes.
Edit: Yeah, where does EA say anything about an early 2012 release?
bgassassin said:
Yeah, I hope EA and the other devs are getting on Nintendo's case about that.bgassassin said:Anyway, Madden is one of the main reasons for a second Upad.
Coolwhip said:I'm kind of in the 'PLEASE tell us how high the specs of WiiU are' camp. But does it really matter in the end? We know MS and Sony based on timing alone will have much more impressive consoles. Add to that that they are much more tech oriented aswell. And then add that Nintendo is being cheap lately wherever possible. As well as incredibly stubborn (Xenoblade fiasco recently). I think it's best for everyones sanity here on GAF to stop putting so much emphasis on the specs. It most likely is just barely powerful enough for Reggie to check the HD box in the eyes of the general consumer.
Coolwhip said:I meant, whatever cheap parts Nintendo can gather to get it a tad more powerful than the PS360.
I know. I'm going to run on the assumption of a $350 launch price and ~$250 to build. (No, I don't think they've learned their lesson from the 3DS. Honestly, I expect the Nintendo of next gen to be the Sony of this gen as far as sales and PR go. With how HORRIBLE they've been this year, you can't blame me for losing trust and confidence in them. They've done nothing right this year at all as a business.)AceBandage said:Well, there are a few key differences between the Wii U and the Wii in terms of design.
They are now using a new Blue Laser tech disc drive which is much more expensive than the Red Laser drives that DVDs use.
They are using a very modern CPU that seems to have almost been custom built for the system.
They are using a somewhat modern GPU.
They have a controller that costs much more to produce this time around.
BurntPork said:I know. I'm going to run on the assumption of a $350 launch price and ~$250 to build. (No, I don't think they've learned their lesson from the 3DS. Honestly, I expect the Nintendo of next gen to be the Sony of this gen as far as sales and PR go. With how HORRIBLE they've been this year, you can't blame me for losing trust and confidence in them. They've done nothing right this year at all as a business.)
In the eyes of the general consumer the PS3 and 360 are HD systems.Coolwhip said:I meant, whatever cheap parts Nintendo can gather to get it a tad more powerful than the PS360.
Thunder Monkey said:In the eyes of the general consumer the PS3 and 360 are HD systems.
If the WiiU eclipses that by any margin it will be known as that powerful HD machine. Running at higher resmolushuns and everythin.
AceBandage said:Well, there are a few key differences between the Wii U and the Wii in terms of design.
They are now using a new Blue Laser tech disc drive which is much more expensive than the Red Laser drives that DVDs use.
AceBandage said:They are using a very modern CPU that seems to have almost been custom built for the system.
AceBandage said:They are using a somewhat modern GPU.
AceBandage said:They have a controller that costs much more to produce this time around.
Coolwhip said:Nintendo so far has downplayed the specs and the importance of the resmolushuns though. It's all about the 'experience'. So I'm sure the general consumer will never know if it's more powerful or not. All Nintendo PR so far had said that it's on par with the current HD systems.
bgassassin said:You're ignoring both the "maybe" in the post you quoted and the one not far after calling Sony a wild card.
bgassassin said:I'm expecting the next generation to return back to the normalcy of previous release cycles. The last gen was too unique compared to the past to expect it to be repeated, especially with the problems that came with it. Both will be undoubtedly be better than Wii U, but nothing like some expect or hope. Unless PS4 comes out in 2014.
Lol wut?z0m3le said:The Wii's DVD slot loader actually cost about $31 at launch, since it was mini and normal for a slot loader I believe it was the first of it's kind, and blu-ray roms are much cheaper now, with Nintendo's lack of royality payments too, I would say the price is negated.
I think this would certainly be much higher than the ~$13 Wii CPU, I'd guess $40-80
I think it will be cheaper than the CPU, maybe $30-60 which should put them @ HD4730-4850
Yes, controller will cost $50-70 easily, LCD would cost $30-40 + wireless and controls for $60-70 total.
Other components would cost maybe $100+$40(what Wii's extra costs totaled) for the final price.
System to build would cost: ~$260-$350 = Nintendo sold Wii at an estimated $50 profit at launch, so $299 for the low price, and $399 for the high price. I doubt they would go full high end, as $399 seems to miss their target, and Reggie has already said that the price would be competitive (from a value perspective) to current HD twins. Meaning they won't be priced outside the market, and I would argue anything over $350 is beyond that price.
AceBandage said:The general population won't be able to tell the difference between BF3 on the PS3 and the PC, though.
And despite the fact that it's easily recognizable to you and me, they just don't see it until you point it out.
The Wii U will be powerful enough, regardless of actual specs.
Beyond that, it's all up to the software to move the thing.
I see you didn't bother to read the engadget link I posted giving estimated price of the console to build, it was 158 for internals and 196 after everything else was taken into consideration. Wii sold for 249.99 at launch, which meant $54 estimated profit per unit.Mr_Brit said:Lol wut?
No, the controller is not going cost $70 to to make. A lot of the components in that controller will be similar to what's in the $6 Wii Remote Plus. It'll be $30-50, I'm positive.z0m3le said:Yes, controller will cost $50-70 easily, LCD would cost $30-40 + wireless and controls for $60-70 total.
AceBandage said:The general population won't be able to tell the difference between BF3 on the PS3 and the PC, though.
And despite the fact that it's easily recognizable to you and me, they just don't see it until you point it out.
The Wii U will be powerful enough, regardless of actual specs.
Beyond that, it's all up to the software to move the thing.
KageMaru said:I liked how close this gen was in both sales and performance.
BurntPork said:No, the controller is not going cost $70 to to make. A lot of the components in that controller will be similar to what's in the $6 Wii Remote Plus. It'll be $30-50, I'm positive.
And Nintendo isn't going to spend more than $250 altogether. If the costs are over $300, it'll cost $400, which will cause an immediate flop.
What? Where is it?z0m3le said:I see you didn't bother to read the engadget link I posted giving estimated price of the console to build, it was 158 for internals and 196 after everything else was taken into consideration. Wii sold for 249.99 at launch, which meant $54 estimated profit per unit.
specialguy said:Nah, it is never about software, it is always about hardware.
Mock and laugh, but at some level I speak the truth.
Look at this thread, 80% of the people here hope desperately the Wii U has good hardware chops. Desperately.
Mr_Brit said:What? Where is it?
Also around 2004-2005, the GC was being sold for around £60 in the UK and it was profitable. What makes you think a Wii sold two years later and with a die shrink would cost so much more than that?
I HIGHLY doubt the the screen with cost that much. Touchscreens are dirt-cheap these days. The 3DS's two screens cost under $30 total, so I would expect the screen to be $20-30. I seen no reason why it would be $40. However, I'll admit that I forget the battery, so I'll revise to $40-55.z0m3le said:LCD screen should cost $40(touch), battery is going to cost you at least $5(likely $10), the wireless is going to cost you at least $10 but the tech is pretty advanced not to have noticeable lag(expect $15), the controller parts are going to cost you maybe $8...
That's $63-$73...
As for the estimation I gave, Wii cost $196 to make, Wii U will cost more (Iwata said as much) so yeah $260 is well within that ball park, and I said $350 for cost to manufacture is the absolute limit. I agree with you $400 is too high for mainstream, but Gamers will pay 400 for a new console, though more Gamers will pay $350 for that same console, and Nintendo really should be placing this at the best pricing it can, $299 for a $260 to build console, would be the best business decision they could make.
I expect a $349 console as 360 kentec sold extremely well at that price.
BurntPork said:I HIGHLY doubt the the screen with cost that much. Touchscreens are dirt-cheap these days. The 3DS's two screens cost under $30 total, so I would expect the screen to be $20-30. I seen no reason why it would be $40. However, I'll admit that I forget the battery, so I'll revise to $40-55.
Fine, $40 might be unrealistic, but $70 is just INSANE. If it costs above $55 just to make, someone at Nintendo needs to be fired. That would, yet again, be suicide as far as third-party support goes because that would either cut into everything or raise the price of the console drastically.z0m3le said:Could you break down the $40 version into components? I'm still trying to figure out how you put a $30 6.2inch touch screen (which I would imagine is the lowest price you could go) plus $10 for battery, wiimote+ that cost $6, plus other controller components and instant lag free wireless for basically free... I could imagine maybe $53 being the lowest... but i could easily see that growing to $70, just based on low balling all the components prices.
BurntPork said:Fine, $40 might be unrealistic, but $70 is just INSANE. If it costs above $55 just to make, someone at Nintendo needs to be fired. That would, yet again, be suicide as far as third-party support goes because that would either cut into everything or raise the price of the console drastically.
Could you at least find a figure supporting the screen costing $40? Adding touch to the screen probably costs less than a dollar now, not $10-15 as you imply.
Take a look at this:
Your $5 estimate for the battery is probably correct. $10 isn't likely at all.[/QUOTE]
if you imagine 2 DSi screens, you are looking a 6.5inch diagonal length, though you would need 4 of them to actually make a 6.5inch screen, 1 6.2inch screen would be cheaper than 4 3.5inch screens, so you could cut the price down a bit, still according to hands on impressions, it's a high quality screen and even cutting down the price of 4 DSi screens to 1 larger screen, you would have a price around $35 dollars.
Prices online for a component LCD are far more expensive than they cost to make, so I can't find you a reasonable one, But GPS units can get pretty low in price, so I do think that using 4 DSi screens minus a bit off the top would give you a price in that $35 dollar range. Yeah, didn't know what to price the battery at, $5 was my low estimate, it might even be below that. I still think my pricing of 53 is the lowest it could be considering the other tech involved. (wireless/wiimote/battery)
*sigh* You're right. Still, I don't see it above $60 total. Even that seems odd, as it means that it costs about as much to make as a low-end tablet.z0m3le said:if you imagine 2 DSi screens, you are looking a 6.5inch diagonal length, though you would need 4 of them to actually make a 6.5inch screen, 1 6.2inch screen would be cheaper than 4 3.5inch screens, so you could cut the price down a bit, still according to hands on impressions, it's a high quality screen and even cutting down the price of 4 DSi screens to 1 larger screen, you would have a price around $35 dollars.
Prices online for a component LCD are far more expensive than they cost to make, so I can't find you a reasonable one, But GPS units can get pretty low in price, so I do think that using 4 DSi screens minus a bit off the top would give you a price in that $35 dollar range. Yeah, didn't know what to price the battery at, $5 was my low estimate, it might even be below that. I still think my pricing of 53 is the lowest it could be considering the other tech involved. (wireless/wiimote/battery)
The DSi estimates are from 2009, though, and the difference likely isn't more than a couple dollars.mrklaw said:1 6.2" screen would be more than the price of 4 smaller ones. Take a slab of LCD, even if you have a small defect in one area, you can still cut out 3.5" screens from the rest of it. With a larger screen you're more likely to hit a defect so you'll get less yield compared to smaller screens.
It also would be affected based on standard sizes. 3.5" is a fairly standard size. 6.2" with 800x 480 (or whatever) isn't that standard a size. Anything non-standard will cost more.
mrklaw said:1 6.2" screen would be more than the price of 4 smaller ones. Take a slab of LCD, even if you have a small defect in one area, you can still cut out 3.5" screens from the rest of it. With a larger screen you're more likely to hit a defect so you'll get less yield compared to smaller screens.
It also would be affected based on standard sizes. 3.5" is a fairly standard size. 6.2" with 800x 480 (or whatever) isn't that standard a size. Anything non-standard will cost more.
Yeah, you would. Go look up the price of the GBA in 2003.z0m3le said:Still hopefully they do it anyways, I'd gladly pay $100 for a 2nd controller for multi-local player with that 4swords/ffcc style of game play.
BurntPork said:Yeah, you would. Go look up the price of the GBA in 2003.
The price of a GBA + the cable was less than $100, though, and yet those games still flopped. Why would this be very different?z0m3le said:While the style is similar, you can't really compare a Wii U pad to a GBA, the biggest problem with setting up one of those games was the cable, not the GBAs, lots of people who owned a GameCube owned a GBA, I'd imagine the percentage of GCN owners that owned a GBA was much higher than people made it out to be, heck I think I owned 2 at the time, and I was 18 in 2003. Wii U pad local multiplayer would be at a much higher adoption rate.
The difference is the cable. Many people had a GC and a GBA. But the act of bying a 15 cable for just adding multiplayer feature to a bunch of game really needs an incentive.BurntPork said:The price of a GBA + the cable was less than $100, though, and yet those games still flopped. Why would this be very different?
That doesn't mean that Nintendo knows that's the issue. They have no clue what fans think, so they just guessed that price was the issue and then decided to make Wii controllers required for multiplayer.Jackano said:The difference is the cable. Many people had a GC and a GBA. But the act of bying a 15 cable for just adding multiplayer feature to a bunch of game really needs an incentive.
Plus, imagine you had a GC, and a GBA. Your friend only have a GBA. No way you will buy him a cable, no way he will buy a cable for playing with you.
With Wii U and 3DS, you only need to own the systems. Of course it is more expensive, but there is no need for an extra act of buying something that seems useless.
Your friend/bro have a 3DS, he joins you in your game. End of story.
AceBandage said:Not sure exactly what Retro is working on, but they specifically said not DKCR2.
This is Nintendo. It's totally not unusual for them to have a blockbuster game, then not a direct followup for 4+ years.Game-Biz said:They HAVE to be lying.
Retro is definitely expanding, and seems to form additional teams right now.topramen said:lets just pray retro expands to two (or more! teams)
Yearly products from them would be great.
Prime Team
DKC:R Team
3ds team?
Coolwhip said:Yes I agree with that except the last part. What actually moves millions of consoles is hard for us to say. You need extensive market research for that. I'm pretty curious what the results would be if you asked the 100 ish million PS360 owners why they bought the system.