Quote from: (probably not) Anonymous on Yesterday at 20:50:57*Your logicQuote from: Logoffon on Yesterday at 14:38:01Yes, a 7.3 trillion dollar company is gonna collapse because they make their games easier for people to buy. You're logic makes perfect sense.Quote from: TJJ on Yesterday at 13:32:04Nintendo needs to adapt its business model, not alienate its customer base. Offering games through legitimate, accessible services—rather than locking them behind proprietary hardware—would be the first step toward solving the problem.So you prefer to have them collapse just to satisfy your demands? Not all ex-console companies survive with just their IPs behind their back.
Quote from: Pirater on Yesterday at 21:42:11They're bad to you, but not necessarily to everyone else. Don't use your own experience as a base of assumption.Quote from: (probably not) Anonymous on Yesterday at 20:54:01people have to resort to piracy to play their games
are they though? I just find this find that hard to believe that a substantial number are when their games are so bad.
The last time I tried, I ended up deleting their game after 2 hours. They don't have anything worth keeping to pirate.
Quote from: (probably not) Anonymous on Yesterday at 20:54:01people have to resort to piracy to play their games
Quote from: TJJ on Yesterday at 13:32:04Nintendo fighting piracy like it's 1995.This exactly. Nintendo's brand used to be that it made family oriented things. That means affordable and fun. Instead of power they focused on fun factor, etc. More recently they're losing that, and becoming like literally every other company. It's honestly just a skill issue on their part people have to resort to piracy to play their games lol
Gabe Newell said it best: "Piracy is always a service problem."
So how do I play Nintendo's games on a PC without emulation or ROMs? The answer: I can't.
Nintendo hardware is expensive and hopelessly outclassed by even modest PCs, other consoles, and even flagship mobile devices. On top of that, it enforces rigid form factors and input paradigms, leaving users with little flexibility.
Nintendo needs to adapt its business model, not alienate its customer base. Offering games through legitimate, accessible services—rather than locking them behind proprietary hardware—would be the first step toward solving the problem.
Quote from: Logoffon on Yesterday at 14:38:01Yes, a 7.3 trillion dollar company is gonna collapse because they make their games easier for people to buy. You're logic makes perfect sense.Quote from: TJJ on Yesterday at 13:32:04Nintendo needs to adapt its business model, not alienate its customer base. Offering games through legitimate, accessible services—rather than locking them behind proprietary hardware—would be the first step toward solving the problem.So you prefer to have them collapse just to satisfy your demands? Not all ex-console companies survive with just their IPs behind their back.
Quote from: Logoffon on Yesterday at 14:38:01So you prefer to have them collapse ...
Quote from: TJJ on Yesterday at 13:32:04Nintendo needs to adapt its business model, not alienate its customer base. Offering games through legitimate, accessible services—rather than locking them behind proprietary hardware—would be the first step toward solving the problem.So you prefer to have them collapse just to satisfy your demands? Not all ex-console companies survive with just their IPs behind their back.