Nintendo Thread: Nintendo Direct Mini 03/26/2020

Which Pokémon game will you be buying?

  • Let's Go Pikachu!

    Votes: 13 46.4%
  • Let's Go Eevee!

    Votes: 3 10.7%
  • Both!

    Votes: 4 14.3%
  • None!

    Votes: 8 28.6%
  • O.0

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    28
  • Poll closed .
We finally have a pretty firm idea of what Nintendo has in store for the upcoming NX.

As revealed by an extensive pair of reports from Eurogamer yesterday, the console is a portable/home system hybrid. The unit has an integrated screen with a controller plugged into either end. When on the move the screen can be propped up and controllers connected for two (or more?) player fun, while at home it can link to a base station for TV play.

The innards appear to be based on Nvidia’s Tegra mobile chipset. Whether it’s the existing Tegra 1 or the upcoming Tegra 2, this means NX will not compete with the likes of PS4 and Xbox One in the power race.

Nintendo is doing its own thing. Again. And history shows this can lead to both glory and failure.

Most of this NX news is largely in line with the steady stream of rumours we’ve been seeing about the machine all year, although Nintendo’s choice to partner with Nvidia certainly is a surprise, as are the ramifications.

Here’s what we think may be the advantages and disadvantages of Nintendo’s chosen approach:

THE PROS

Unified development
You could argue a number of reasons as to why the Wii U has been such a big failure for Nintendo, but first party software support (well, all software support, really) would certainly be among them. Diehard fans will argue that the console has had plenty of love from Nintendo, but the truth is too many of the big hitters have been absent for too long.

Nintendo’s support for 3DS has been a lot better. Is that why 3DS has outperformed Wii U? That’s a complicated question, but it’s been a big plus for the device, even if ultimately 3DS has also fallen short of Nintendo’s expectations.

Regardless, Nintendo’s decision to unify its home and portable output will definitely result in one thing – more Nintendo games more often. Even if third parties stay clear of NX, Nintendo should be positioned to offer unprecedented output for its new console – providing Tokyo doesn’t shift all its developers over to mobile projects.

Price
Early online speculation about pricing for the NX expects it to be cheaper than current consoles, but from what we’ve heard it’s going to be cheaper than even the vast majority expect. This is a machine that is targeting the mass market, and Nintendo certainly plans for it to have a mass market price. Price is one Wii U mistake Nintendo is determined not to repeat. This could be NX's single biggest win.

A simple message
“Take your games with you on the go.” It’s a simple message that avoids all the pitfalls of confusion that dogged the Wii U. The NX sounds like an easier sell. Nintendo can nail this. They must nail it.

Avoids competition
The PS4 is an ongoing and huge success. And despite what you might think, the Xbox One is doing well too, certainly compared to its predecessor which itself was regarded as a big hit. Nintendo is wise to stay well clear of this lethal pair, even if a sizable portion of its fanbase wants nothing more than a traditional, powerful Nintendo home console.

THE CONS

Competing with tablets
However, by avoiding the twin threats of PS4 and Xbox One Nintendo finds itself squaring off against another huge challenge – the mobile market. Portable gaming may be doing OK in Japan, but it’s a brave analyst that predicts anything other than decline for the sector in the years ahead. In the West it’s already dead.

Pokemon Go has just proven the potential for break-out mobile games success, and now Nintendo wants to try and convince gamers to carry around an entirely new and separate device for portable gaming? The joy of packing your iPad for a trip is that you’ve got with you a wonderfully capable games machine that’s also the best internet browsing experience and essentially a fully fledged computer. Even if the NX gaming experience is top-notch, you can be pretty sure Nintendo’s OS and browser and Twitter app and who knows what else won’t be.

Different games for different markets
Yes, there are certainly times when we’d all like the chance to play that triple-A game we’re currently addicted to on the move. But it’s also very true that portable gaming and home console gaming is very different. You might have dropped 50 hours into Flick Kick Football over the course of a few years in many, many five-minute chunks, but it’s unlikely you’ll ever want to play it on your TV at home.

By the same token, that 200 hours you’ve put into COD multiplayer in the early hours of the morning is not an experience you’ll want to take with you on your morning commute.

This poses a real challenge for Nintendo. Its machine is designed for games both on the go and on the sofa, but it’s going to be hard to design titles that are ideally suited to both places. And if you’re left developing games best suited to one or the other, than the entire point of the NX starts to feel a bit flimsy.

Horsepower
By making the NX portable-friendly Nintendo can’t avoid the peril of lessening its home credentials. There is a big chunk of the Nintendo faithful who simply want to play new Mario and Zelda games at home. That their experiences will be less technically capable because they’ve also been forced into buying a handheld has already drawn early criticism.

Nintendo has definitely proved time and time again, however, that it can make its comparatively underpowered hardware punch well above its weight. Well, it’s going to need to do that again if it wants the NX to be a real home console competitor. Surely 1080p output for its Tegra chipset is the absolute bare minimum requirement here.

Haven’t we been here before?
As a friend of MCV said on Twitter last night: “Let me get this straight. Nintendo, undeterred by its console-with-portable-aspirations, is making a portable-with-console-aspirations?” Wii U’s hybrid experiment was such a failure that you really must admire Nintendo’s intention to give it another go. You’d think the biggest trick here will be to ensure the mixed and confused messaging that surrounded the Wii U from day one is avoided.

MCV has spoken to one person with hands-on experience with the machine. Their assessment? "It feels like a bit of a novelty."

Where’s the new?
The prior point kind of underlines the fact that the NX doesn’t seem to be a new idea. We’ve had plenty of portable devices that output to TVs, and we’ve had portables that use external controllers. Of course, none of them play Nintendo games, and that x-factor will always count for something. The ultimate question is does it still count for enough?
 
why hasnt Pokemon been put on console? not the fighting games but the classic style type thats on handheld? ive always wondered about that.
 
I'm just gonna hold out judgment until the unveiling. I don't what to expect right now.
 
I haven't been on here in a while but I updated the OP with a bit of info on the NX. I'll continue to update the OP with more info once it starts coming in and I have a bit of time.

I can't wait for the system to come out cause from what I've been reading, It's gonna be a quite powerful portable system and I would love to be able to play Zelda on the move and have it look like the version on the Wii U at least, that's gonna be awesome :pimp: :pimp: :pimp:
 
Last edited:
why hasnt Pokemon been put on console? not the fighting games but the classic style type thats on handheld? ive always wondered about that.

I'm guessing because Nintendo/Pokemon Company wants the games to exclusive to handheld.

Looks like everyone will finally get a home console Pokémon, somewhat at least since nintendo has consolidated their home and mobile console departments and the NX is a hybrid.

I for one can't wait to spend all my hours playing Pokémon lol, wake up, play nx on the go, play Pokemon go, and then come home to play it on the big screen :pimp: :pimp:
 
Looks like everyone will finally get a home console Pokémon, somewhat at least since nintendo has consolidated their home and mobile console departments and the NX is a hybrid.

I for one can't wait to spend all my hours playing Pokémon lol, wake up, play nx on the go, play Pokemon go, and then come home to play it on the big screen
pimp.gif
pimp.gif
calling it now. the NX will have a  built in 3DS slot
 
Last edited:
Pokemon Y is pretty cool so far. Only thing i hate is the camera angles inthe big city. And the fact that I dont know who the hell any of these pokemon are lol
 
A quote from the WSJ about the NX.

The Wall Street Journal is getting in on the Nintendo NX rumors now. Yesterday we had a rather large rumored info dump on the NX and its form factor as well as power. Today the WSJ says that the platform is also going to be able to play Nintendo's mobile titles. This rumor seems pretty plausible and makes a lot of sense for Nintendo. Might as well give fans as many ways as possible to play their mobile games!

This is big, it'll give people more ways to play Pokemon go and I'm sure that they'll probably implement something for it to work outdoors, probably add a sim card slot or whatever.
 
Looks like everyone will finally get a home console Pokémon, somewhat at least since nintendo has consolidated their home and mobile console departments and the NX is a hybrid.


I for one can't wait to spend all my hours playing Pokémon lol, wake up, play nx on the go, play Pokemon go, and then come home to play it on the big screen :pimp: :pimp:
calling it now. the NX will have a  built in 3DS slot

According to Eurogamer who leaked the info, the NX will not have backwards compatibility unfortunately. I'm guessing that they chose to stuff as much tech into it as they could in order to have it be a hybrid so they opted out of BC.
 
Hopefully they can at least bring over the VC and not charge you for the games you already purchased.
 
I'm very interested in the NX. I love the gamepad and would have beem devastated if there was no off play option. So that's nice. But it souds like a million things could go wrong from the controllers, to battery life, to data chuging, interface, touch screen etc
 
Assuming there is one, I hope the gamepad is an accessory and not the main controller. I don't want to buy the console and then have to spend an extra $100 on controllers
 
Back
Top Bottom