Neal discusses his reservations about the current Wii landscape.
All this Operation Rainfall talk is generally depressing, especially since the word from Nintendo of America is a resounding "lol no way those games are coming out!" What saddens me the most is the overwhelming sense of doom related to Nintendo of America. I'd like to think everything is over-exaggerated (likely true), but it still smarts to know that the company I've been following both as a fan and a staffer at Nintendo World Report doesn't seem to care about me anymore.
Now I know that seems somewhat childish. After writing that comment, I kind of envisioned myself as a kid stomping his feet because his parents kept on buying him Winter Games instead of Super Mario Bros. For the record, I'd like to point that my non-game-loving parents bought me a Game Boy with DK '94 and Super Mario Land 2 one Christmas. Shockingly, despite having no knowledge of video games, they managed to litter my original handheld with all sorts of games that I later learned were some of the best on the system (or made by people I'd later interview).
Regardless, over the years, I've always been a Nintendo player first. To date, my Wii collection dwarfs my Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 collection. Part of that has to do with review copies, but even still, I'm drawn more to Wii games than I am other games. I'll gladly take A Boy and His Blob over Gears of War any day of the week. It's just my personal preference.
Looking at the slate for the next six months, and just the year 2011 in general, the amount of games I want to play likely does not exceed 10. That comes after four years of wanting more games than I could afford. (Side note: I didn't intend for this to happen, but this is another "dammit! 2011 on Wii is freaking awful!" article)
That's what makes me so saddened by Operation Rainfall. Those three games would do a lot to perk up the second half of 2011, even if only one or two of them came out this year. It's the end of the system's life span; I get it that there won't be as many games on the system. There should still be games, though, and thanks to Nintendo of America, there are even fewer coming out.
To conclude what will likely be the third in an endless series of "Wii Suck 2011" articles, I'll make a short list of what I've used my Wii as in 2011.
- Netflix Player
- GameCube (Wind Waker, GBA-to-GCN games, MVP Baseball 2005, Super Monkey Ball)
- Smash Bros.-playing device
- Means to play de Blob 2 and Bit.Trip Flux for review
- Way to show friends trailers for DS/3DS games
- Lauren and I played Boom Blox one time
- I played Tiger Woods 11 for like an hour a week or two ago
- I played Conduit 2 for an hour or so before I cried and burnt it like The Crying Game
- I watched my friend 100% Super Mario World over a span of two nights
Now, that might all seem like it is more than most people play their Wii, but keep in mind this fact: I run a volunteer Nintendo enthusiast site.
Let's end this on a happy note. The 3DS rocks. It ain't perfect, but you naysayers can suck it. The Extra Mode in Kirby's Dream Land is actually a ton of fun and challenging. I can list not one, not two, but four games I truly adore that have come out in the system's first three months. I just wish that Nintendo could offer that type of experience on the Wii, and I don't care if its the end of its life. The DS is, for all intents and purposes, a defunct system and it's still providing me a fuller slate of experiences and games. If only Nintendo's home consoles could learn from their handhelds and stop bitching out at the end of their lives...