And do they look like they still have a viable business model?
And do they look like they still have a viable business model?
Ah yes, the good ol’ pivot to video. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pivot_to_video
The Saturn managed to do well in Japan after a soft relaunch with a new marketing campaign
Every platform wants to be every other platform nowadays
Glad I never made an account there
What did they do wrong? They’re just providing value by offering consumers free pets with their food!
I think it’ll be the recent past, showing how Lumiose came to be what it is in X/Y. A prequel story could do wonders for X/Y, fleshing out Lysandre with an actual backstory could make him interesting.
It was more than a reskin, with a new catching system based on Pokémon Go, but yeah, the area design was pretty much already done
Let’s Go Pikachu/Eevee actually ran well, with only occasional dips. Not sure how their first Switch outing was also their most polished…
And sometimes, a game gets a patch that actually makes it worse
Rumor has it that the Switch 2 was going to be revealed this month, but got delayed. I assume this is a partner showcase because Nintendo promised third-parties a direct this month but aren’t ready to show off what they’re working on
I hope it goes away
Mighty Gunvolt Burst is a great Mega Man-style platformer
Unsurprising
Or they could make a launcher that offers features that Steam lacks.
Except without the GamePad’s uses for giving one player exclusive information in local multiplayer or the touch screen actually being used in games.
Vendor lock-in is a big one. Losing access to your purchased games/apps and having a harder time bringing over your music and video libraries could turn people off, even if F2P games and streaming have made these less relevant. There’s also the matter of switching cloud storage providers
True, but they shouldn’t be the only option. A big part of why they sell the way they do is brand recognition.
Why do Android manufacturers keep turning their phones into iPhones? If I wanted an iPhone, I’d buy one.
The fewer devices listening in on me, the better.