@kingmohd
While the WiiU certainly isn't as powerful as the PlayStation 4 or the Nextbox it is at least more powerful than the 360 and PS3. While not being able to handle high resolutions, it at least appears capable to handle much better textures and shading while being able to maintain a full 720p versus the slightly lower resolutions that the others use. (Tekken Tag 2 for instance never drops from that resolution while the PS3 and 360 have adaptive horizontal resolution that lowers whenever the engine is taxed).
For Need For Speed, they were able to use the PC textures and lighting engine.
Idries Hamadi chimes in with his final thoughts.
"The Wii U has had a bit of a bad rap - people have said it's not as powerful as 360, this, that and the other. That, by and large, has been based on apples to oranges comparisons that don't really hold water. Hopefully we'll go some way to proving that wrong," he says.
360 version of Most Wanted:
WiiU version:
So while you wont see PS4 resolutions and framerates, it appears that it can at least handle a decent graphical upgrade. It's not nearly on the level of the original Wii when it comes to being outdated.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digit ... the-scenes
But what matters in the end is games. Luckily the next round of retail games comes around March 18th with Lego City, Most Wanted, and Monster Hunter. Hopefully the big N will have some more stuff ready to announce by then. The Wonderful 101 and Pikmin 3 were supposed to be released by the end of Q2 so they shouldn't be too far off. I remember on the 360 where after the launch lineup pretty much the only games to look forward to were Oblivion and GRAW. By this time next year it will be safe to judge the WiiU's sales performance but I feel now it's still to early to be condemning the system.
Older. Not wiser.