Ad #2
"Hands on" http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/xbox- ... t-hands-on

I thought this flailing travesty formerly known as Natal deserved its own topic.
Fnck you Kinect. The casual pie can only be had by so many.



only problem with that is; why would my grandparents, parents or any people of that demographic own a 360/PS3 in the first place?dsheinem wrote:As much as I have no interest in these, and as much as Sony/MS have existing audiences with very little interest, the point of these add-ons is to expand their existing user base by bringing in those casual gamers who bought a Wii so they could play Wii Sports, Wii Fit, etc. (and little else).
So of course a group of "core" gamers on most gaming sites are going to revolt - the product is not really for them (despite a few software nods to this existing demographic). They are trying to sell this to your mom, your grandparents, and those people who love to pick up a Wiimote and flail about for a while. It certainly has a chance to succeed with those audiences, if the price can remain competitive with the Wii.

That's why I mentioned price. Especially if a family member already has a PS3/360 in the house, an add-on may be more economic that buying a new Wii + Motion plus + extra controller + extra nunchuck etc. Hell, if they can get the 360 basic unit down to $150, I bet they have a good chance to sell this and the system for a price that is just around $200 or so. That may eat into future Will sales.Lord_Santa wrote:only problem with that is; why would my grandparents, parents or any people of that demographic own a 360/PS3 in the first place?dsheinem wrote:As much as I have no interest in these, and as much as Sony/MS have existing audiences with very little interest, the point of these add-ons is to expand their existing user base by bringing in those casual gamers who bought a Wii so they could play Wii Sports, Wii Fit, etc. (and little else).
So of course a group of "core" gamers on most gaming sites are going to revolt - the product is not really for them (despite a few software nods to this existing demographic). They are trying to sell this to your mom, your grandparents, and those people who love to pick up a Wiimote and flail about for a while. It certainly has a chance to succeed with those audiences, if the price can remain competitive with the Wii.
first you pay for the console, then pay for the add-on?
I do realize that it makes sense in some twisted way, but surely that demographic already has a Wii, if they're even slightly interested in these types of games