When your main target audience are younger children, the elderly, and non-gamers, you don’t need fancy specs.
The vast majority of gamers in general don’t necessarily know what the specs mean anyway, so using them to market your product likely doesn’t help in any way with most customers.
Exactly. There’s zero things that interest me in the other consoles when I’m a casual / non gamer. I wouldn’t even spend the amount of crazy money those consoles ask.
Idk if it makes me elderly, a child, or a non-gamer, but I fucking loved BOTW/TOTK. Nintendo, through those games and countless more, have repeatedly proven frame rates and fidelity aren’t what make games great. Sure, some games (especially competitive ones) benefit from better performance, but just as many get by on their creativity, story, etc.
I’m not saying those are the only groups that enjoy their games, just who Nintendo aims to sell to primarily, and what they do with marketing more than what they do in the games themselves.
While they do make games that are generally simple to understand, pick up and enjoy by all, they really show this in their ads for the games and the systems they make. They focus on accessibility, family time, etc. Not necessarily graphics, computing power, or anything of a technical nature.
When your main target audience are younger children, the elderly, and non-gamers, you don’t need fancy specs.
The vast majority of gamers in general don’t necessarily know what the specs mean anyway, so using them to market your product likely doesn’t help in any way with most customers.
Exactly. There’s zero things that interest me in the other consoles when I’m a casual / non gamer. I wouldn’t even spend the amount of crazy money those consoles ask.
Idk if it makes me elderly, a child, or a non-gamer, but I fucking loved BOTW/TOTK. Nintendo, through those games and countless more, have repeatedly proven frame rates and fidelity aren’t what make games great. Sure, some games (especially competitive ones) benefit from better performance, but just as many get by on their creativity, story, etc.
I’m not saying those are the only groups that enjoy their games, just who Nintendo aims to sell to primarily, and what they do with marketing more than what they do in the games themselves.
While they do make games that are generally simple to understand, pick up and enjoy by all, they really show this in their ads for the games and the systems they make. They focus on accessibility, family time, etc. Not necessarily graphics, computing power, or anything of a technical nature.