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I'm sure if Nintendo named the 64 the Ultra 64, and the Gamecube as Project Dolphin, they would be more popular. But not by much. The only really "mature" games I can think of in the history of Nintendo are Eternal Darkness, Killer 7 and Resident Evil series. All of which can be disregarded if you're not into those things. Nintendo titles and products have always put kids first, and that's why the majority of people here (1985~90 crowd) still stick with them. If I was new to the gaming scene, I'd probably disregard buying a Gamecube immediately, after seeing the amount of range on other consoles. After all, you're going to purchase a console for it's games, not for the actual console itself. Back in the day, I followed the Megadrive crowd around. Not that there was an actual "crowd" or even a group of people, but there was still the SNES and NES scene, which all glared at, like some black person with blonde hair. I ended up purchasing a Gamecube when the price dropped awhile back, and so far I've only managed to buy a single game for it. Value for money? No, obviously not. The same applies with my xbox, except I've been renting and downloading them as it's modded so it's a little different. You're lucky Nintendo aren't aiming at the 85~90 crowd still, otherwise everything would consist of first person shooters and 3D fighting games. Jam it back in, in the dark. |
If I don't like them, I disregard them. But that's just that - as the majority of Gamecube games are aimed at kids, over adults. Much like I disregard 3D fighting titles. It doesn't mean they don't exist, it's just the majority of 2D fighters have one up over on them. There's still a decent amount of games worth buying for the Gamecube, but most of them would be Pikmin, SSBM, you know, game titles which are aimed at kids. It isn't a bad thing, but I'm sure that Eternal Darkness and Killer 7 are good games (I haven't played either so far, and I have no intention to, as I'm not really into horror/violent games. This applies to Silent Hill (after 1) Project Zero/Fatal Frame series, Siren series and so forth) but they're just not in my interest like others. And that's it, really. The majority of people are more likely to choose cartoonish, animeish games over horror titles, for their kids and for themselves. How ya doing, buddy?
Last edited by Elixir; Apr 24, 2006 at 09:09 AM.
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Hardly reality. Except Gran Turismo 4 is attempting to imitate reality with the graphics and "real driving simulator" rubbish. I own 3, I've spent a decent amount of hours in 3, but I wouldn't consider it to be that real. Back when it was released, sure, but that was 2002 or something. Pikmin's concept is simple, uncomplicated and anyone can do it. Madden has violence, isn't simple for people who haven't a clue of sports, and not for everyone. Gran Turismo is the same, and gets very complicated very easily, especially with the training courses and such. Both games have more depth over Pikmin, and aren't as challenging. Speaking of Gran Turismo, how anyone can sit there through 200 laps of the same repetitive shit is beyond me. But that's another story. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Mario Soccer and Winning Eleven 10. Which is more "kiddy" and which would be easier to play? The comparison is obvious. Most games that are targetted at kids, whether they're within a concept (here, the concept is sports, shrouded by Mario and crew) or not, they're still getting the message out. Sports games. For kids. And besides, I would doubt that very many kids prefer Winning Eleven, or any sports game for that matter, over the likes of Mario Kart or Mario Soccer. Unless you have some hardcore soccer fan, they're going to settle with the more colorful, "for kids" title. It's marketing, and it works. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
First of all. It doesn't matter what the ESRB rating is. If it did, kids wouldn't be playing GTA, Manhunt, Under Pressure or Resident Evil 4 for that matter. But they manage to do so without any trouble whatsoever. Second of all, gore and fighting games still end up in the hands of kids. Why? Because it's "cool" to have games which you aren't meant to have. But what does this have to do with anything? Well, the point I'm making is that the "Everyone" rating is irrelevant. Read that again, and again, and again, and feel free to stop sucking your own dick in the process. Third of all, take a 10 year old kid. He has just purchased Resident Evil 4, a game which has an R rating and also has gore, fighting, blood, death, and all the rest that's considered bad for kids. The game itself is pretty difficult in itself, and he's more likely to be frustrated with that over a Mario title or something more subtle. That's a perfect example of a game which is aimed at the mature audience, hence the rating, but is one that kids would play. And when they're frustrated with a game, they'll go back to their Mario or Pikmin (which isn't hard, what a crock of shit) titles that are more "fun." Because "fun" for kids, is easy. No majority of kid wants a challenge in a game. Fuck me blind if you see someone under 15 who appreciates shooting games (not first person shooters, you mainstream motherfuckers) for what they're really worth. The key in this is frustration. Depending on your age depends on how far you're going to tolerate a game for. My mother plays Ms. Pacman, and she blames the controller. She's done this possibly over a hundred times. But you know what? She continues to play it. If she isn't in the mood, she won't play it. Parents and people of that age aren't meant to take games seriously, and they are more likely to play an easy game. The competitive gaming edge mostly applies to 15~45 year olds. That said, most adults 25+ will be found with an xbox, PS2, or both. With sports, fighting, or first person shooting titles. It's because they're familiar with sports, shooting, or fighting. They associate with their games as they do with real life activities. Of course, shooting, fighting, and sports, are all real life events. But you aren't going to find something like Halo in real life, that's just something brought on by popularity as a remix variation of something that's already enjoyed. First person shooting. Millions of xboxtards flock to E3 for information on Halo 3, millions of PStards await the next GTA. Why? Because that's what they associate with. And the Gamecube fans flock to E3 for, well, the Revolution. Because the Gamecube is dead. The people that still own a Gamecube aren't playing it for the upcoming titles (there's not even that many, now) but for what they currently own, don't have, or they're not wealthy enough to purchase a console with more variety. And what little of the Gamecube is left, will be either 1) Titles made from movies, such as X-Men, Spiderman, The Incredibles, or 2) Games released on the Gamecube as a test to see how well they'll perform on other consoles. They've been doing this for years with the Dreamcast, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if the Gamecube became undead and obscure japanese companies made beta games on it first, just to see how it pans out. But enough about the Gamecube. The majority of kids (I know when I was one, I'd always be appealed by the characters and bright colors, over the more "mature" stuff) will go for Nintendo material. The majority of teenagers will go for the PS2. And the majority of adults seem to lean towards the xbox. Gamecube has the largest array of mainsteam cartoonish titles, while PS2 has the largest variety and is really a mixed bag. And then there's the xbox, with it's sports, fps, and fighting games which it's known for. Given this fact, most collections you'll see out of gamers or just casual console owners in general, will either contain a Dead or Alive title for xbox owners, SSBM, Pikmin, Luigi's Mansion (in other words, a "aimed at kids" title) for the Gamecube owners, and for PS2 I can't really tell. I must address that ultimately it's the range of games that the console designers decide to produce and help produce which influence their console and what people will view their console as. It's up to the consumer to purchase whichever they prefer. It's inevitable to avoid or ignore the amount of titles on the Gamecube that are regarded as "kiddy", and if they weren't, this topic wouldn't exist. Which would be a good thing. Nintendo have brought this on upon themselves, along with the help of little others. But do proper titles like Beyond Good & Evil get the attention they deserve? Psychonauts? Nooooo, it doesn't have Mario on it or the Nintendo logo. Also, it hasn't been confronted in this thread that Gamecube/Nintendo titles have to be exclusive to "kids only" for their reputation to exist. Simply because it isn't true, and you're free to play games at leisure. But the obvious won't go away just because people are decisive in their purchases - Nintendo products have always been bought for kids, from parents, or for kids, by kids. Whether you're an adult or not doesn't matter because the majority overrules the rest. tl;dr) ESRB ratings are irrelevant, the majority of Gamecube games are for kids, games are only worth what the user gets out of them. Thread over. I was speaking idiomatically.
Last edited by Elixir; Apr 25, 2006 at 05:44 AM.
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Actually, you sound like an eb worker, or someone who's previously worked in a gaming store. Which is a bad thing, considering I'm basically typing words here and you're looking at them, and not actually reading them. Much like my experiences with gaming stores have been; "Do you have ____ game in now?" and the responses; "No." "It should be coming out in the year 20XX." "What platform is this GTA game you speak of for?" "I think it's going to retail at $129.95" If some kid wants to play Resident Evil, the chances are he's going to play it. How? Well, whether it's a matter of switching discs with your copy of Crash Bandicoot or not, it doesn't matter. It also isn't the parents' responsibility for fucking video games and their ratings. If ratings were paid attention to as much as the ESRB corporation wished, developers would stop adding violence to their games and some game series would stop entirely, due to lack of profit. Is there a "Not happening" macro? I'd really like to enter it in here, in between a bunch of sentences, just to break it up a little. You know, just to make things more entertaining for the viewers who are painfully loving the process of watching me type. Manhunt was banned from my country. Did that stop me? Fuck no, I downloaded the entire game to PC and played it like that for awhile. If kids can't tell the difference between reality and fantasy, that's their problem. No ESRB rating is going to prevent that, especially when people blatantly ignore the fact that violence sells. And then they wonder why it goes behind their back. Oh, and Beyond Good and Evil didn't bomb, it was a sleeper hit which you obviously haven't played if you're passing comments like that. Sure, blame a company for releasing multiple titles at once, I guess you can kiss companies like Konami good bye, then.
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?
Last edited by Elixir; Apr 25, 2006 at 10:53 AM.
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But ESRB ratings will not stop a kid from playing a game, unless they're weak. Chances are, if they're under 18 and they're buying the game themselves with their own money, parents would let them buy whatever the hell they want. That's society. And I'm sure the amount of parents who actually care what their kids are playing over the amount of parents who don't is a huge difference. And that's why ESRB ratings are stupid. Kids get what they want 90% of the time, and this situation is no different. There's more adults who give in to their kids and their demands, over the adults who don't. There's more demanding kids these days and that isn't going to change. If a game gets banned from specific countries for crossing the line, they've gone too far, and that's their (the game developers) fault. And it has absolutely nothing to do with ESRB ratings or the ratings influenec on whether the game is void from a country or not. They're just irrelevant.
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I really don't know how you can't see this, I mean, you claim to be smart, but you act otherwise, and I'm very confused. Please don't help me in resolving this issue, and in fact, shut the fuck up in the process. That would be helpful. No offense or anything, but you're not exactly replying with points anymore. It's just "your view" and that's it. I'm getting kind of bored, actually.
Furthermore to correct you in your utter stupidity, the government wasn't the ones to prevent Manhunt from coming to New Zealand. It was one person, in charge of what content gets and doesn't get into the country. I haven't said anywhere in this thread that it was related to the government, nor have I stated any real games that have been banned specifically for New Zealand. You seem to make it sound as if this is so, which is just more mindless text I've wasted my time reading through. All in all, if you don't know what you're talking about, don't talk at all. The old phrase "It's better to keep your mouth shut when in doubt, as oppose to opening it and proving everyone you really are."
That said, how about a thread close? I feel as if I'm wasting my time talking to somebody who claims to be of superiority with his big university diploma, but nothing to show for it. Unless I've missed something, properly addressing an issue without disregarding other matters isn't something this guy's good at. I'm done here, feel free to make this thread the first one that hits the Wall of Shame once it's back up. After all, this thread was going good, but yeah. I don't really care for replies anymore as it's become so predictable that it's either Team Australia or the occasional random (the latter happens to be taking place currently) when it comes down to these sorts of threads. It just can't be helped. Very lastly, I'd like to mention once again, that if Gamecube/Nintendo merchandise/games were not for kids, this thread wouldn't exist, and this wouldn't be questioned in gamingforce, gamefaqs, and other forums which I've seen this similar thread arise in. If there's enough people out there to accumulate a question of whether or not "Nintendo games are kiddy" then there's enough people to already know the answer. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body?
Last edited by Elixir; Apr 25, 2006 at 12:57 PM.
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