Lost garden has a great article on Nintendo’s innovation strategy and a couple of points jumped out at me, in particular those about market consolidation and the ossification of game play:
- Players become addicted to a specific set of game mechanics.
- This group of players has a strong homogeneous preference for this genre of games, creating a well defined, easily serviceable market segment.
- Game developers who release games within a genre with a standardized set of play mechanics are most likely to capture the largest percentage of the pre-existing market.
- Over time, the game mechanics defining the genre becomes rigidly defined, the tastes of the genre addicts become highly sophisticated and innovation within the genre is generally punished by the market place.
Call me a heretic but I get the feeling that in their first generation Microsoft has managed to ossify their offerings to pretty much just first person shooters and looking at the line up for the 360 that will continue. Don’t get me wrong, there are some real solid titles for both their consoles but the dearth of game play options saddens me and I find it hard to get excited for the arrival of the 360. And no, enhanced Live features do not get me all a twitter, unless of course they deploy sophisticated asshat filters.
Nintendo, however, has taken a risky course with its newest home console offering, much to the chagrin of the hardcore players. The more I think about the potential of the new controller the more excited I become. Like the DS there is incredible potential and the hope is that developers and publishers utilize it and the market is receptive to it. The problem is that the last item of the above list: innovation is punished. So publishers might as well bring out another Halo, Gran Turismo, or GTA at the expense of the truly charming and innovative games like Beyond Good and Evil. Sad really.
via Joystick, Gaming Steve has the Nintendo keynote address posted. Good reading and it lays bare the company’s strategy and I applaud the direction they are taking.
So I’m taking a couple of days off from work and that usually means that I don’t check things like mail or RSS feeds–its an AM with coffee sort of thing–so I feel a tad blindsided by the news from the Tokyo Game Show regarding Nintendo. I had a feeling that they would hold true to their statement that gaming needs to evolve and, well, I wasn’t expecting it to start a whole new trunk. Frankly, I’m not sure what to think about the revolutions controller. I’m stunned, shocked, horrified, excited, and a tad giddy all at once.
Judge for yourself:


You can read more about it, including impressions of the tech demo and the raving lunacy of fanboys from all camps at Joystick, 4 color rebellion, Gamespot, and IGN. As for myself, I’m cautiously optimistic and am looking forward to when I might be able to try the unit out for myself.

My wife’s player came in yesterday and it is impossibly small– about the size of a pack of gum– yet packs one hell of and auditory punch. I’ll post more pictures and a review when I can get more time with it.
Published by james on September 12, 2005
in Linux.
For the last couple of days I’ve been fiddling around with the next release of Ubuntu (Breezy Badger 5.10) and am looking forward to its formal release. There is a greater level of polish which is evident with the inclusion of a graphical boot screen and a menu editor installed by default. Another nicety includes a graphical application installer off the application menu drop down which will go a long way towards making life a little easier on those who were intimidated by Synaptic. Hopefully, the laptop and server upgrades at my house will be as smooth as it was in VMware.
I was wondering if the three people–could be one due to those damnable dynamic IP addresses ISPs love so dearly–that visit are currently reading anything good. My reading list is ever growing–all fiction for now–but could stand for some fresh contributions. Here’s what I’m reading, what are you reading?