kingmohd84 wrote:You are free to express your opinion
but the way I see it that people no more want dedicated gaming device since I can buy another device for same price and it can do a lot more(video chat/internet/music/video..etc)
No argument there except that people do still want it. The 3DS is selling extremely well and the original PSP is still doing fantastic in Japan. It's just that iPods and such have more universal appeal than a dedicated games devices, because, as you said, they play videos/music/go on the internet etc.
Publishers are selling games in the millions on iOS and I have no doubt that they sold more games on iOS than combined on psp/ds in the last 2 years(notice 2 years).
I wouldn't be surprised about that, as, iOS devices have much higher market penetration than the DS or PSP. I'm not sure about combined, but, whatever.
It is a disadvantage to have no buttons on the iOS,b but amazingly it does work, and in the future it will work even better with faster processor and graphics.
This doesn't make sense. Faster processing and graphics wont make having no-buttons any less of an annoyance. I find games on phones nearly unplayable due to the lack of buttons.
The only way out I see for handheld dedicated gaming devices is they either target young kids, that are crazy about iPods and iPads anyway , so this might NOT work OR, they should turn handheld devices into iOS ones specialized in gaming. For example Vita and DS will go online for browsing, apps, video. In other words, iPods with analogue sticks and buttons.
This....I might buy
The PSP and Vita are basically this. Fact is, that wont really make it sell any better. The people that are serious about playing games on the go will continue to buy dedicated handhelds and those that aren't will continue to buy phones.
ejamer wrote:
I will say that I don't view iOS as a serious gaming platform, but think that it's perfect for casual gaming. Why the distinction? I don't feel like most people buy an iOS device with gaming as the primary reason - or even in the top 2 or 3 reasons. As multifunction devices, they simply do other things better and include games as icing on the cake. Dedicated gaming devices obviously offer the opposite role: games are the reason you own one, and other features and services are nice bonuses.
I basically agree with this statement here, and actually you're entire post was pretty spot on with my opinion. There's some good games to pass the time on phones, but, it certainly doesn't satisfy my needs for mobile gaming and I'll continue to buy dedicated handhelds for that purpose.
Older. Not wiser.