o.pwuaioc wrote:No one was buying the NES for ROB, doesn't mean it wasn't a gimmick. And I 100% agree with you that better graphics (recently, although certainly not in general), the term next-gen, and misleading advertisement of technical specs are all gimmicks. But still no one has said how StreetPass is anything but. You all claim it isn't, but showing has proven difficult so far.
I'm pretty sure that's exactly why people bought the NES in 1985 when it initially came out. They came for the Rob, but stayed for the Mario Bros. Those were Teddy Ruxpin and Cabbage Patch Kid times people (kids) were crazy about toys like that. Anyway ...
StreetPass allows for some interesting things. It depends on how the software uses it, though. For example, in Mii Plaza there's a game you can play called Find Mii. In the game, you play a pseudo RPGesque thing where Mii characters are the people of your party. Your Mii is locked in a cage. When you tag people, their characters become available to you to battle in new dungeons. And each time you tag a person, their Mii gains a level. It's pretty clever. They do things like, your favorite color (which is the shirt color) dictates magic style. Things like that.
The game is entirely about interacting with people in real-life. You can't just sit and play it, and is, for the most part, a proof of concept. But it's pretty fun and allows you to earn items for your Mii which changes how you're represented online. There's other activities there also, like building puzzles based on pieces you get from tagged people.
Anyway, it builds this enriched experience of purely having the handheld with you. That alone makes it not a gimmick. It's not some, "Oh I tried it, but whatever, screw that" feature. It legitimately adds value to the device.
If there's any gimmick with the machine, it's the pedometer feature. (Though that feels more like Nintendo twisting my arm to walk around with the 3DS more than anything else) But even that isn't entirely shallow.
GSZX1337, It's because the idea of a device being a gimmick leads to the idea that, it will have no common use for you. You'll use it once, then forget about it. Which is why, generally speaking, people don't like gimmicks. It's something fragile and shallow to attract you, while really it's just covering up something that you've experienced before and has been done instead of actually adding new depth/features/experience to a familiar idea.