Why DSi is a Home Run for Nintendo

Posted on 21:17, October 9th, 2008 by
David
Ever since the DSi was revealed last week there’s been a steady stream of detractors lamenting the loss of the GBA port for games such as
Guitar Hero, My Weight Loss Coach, Arkanoid, etc.. Questioning the usefulness of its new features declaring that there’s just not enough there for them to upgrade their DS Lites. That Nintendo can stuff their evil plot for all us Lite lovin’ owners to hand-them-down to little sis or sweet Uncle Jim so we can buy ever slimmer DSis for ourselves. About the only group genuinely excited may be the stubborn DS Phat owners who finally see a good value for their upgrade dollar.
Well if Nintendo’s CEO Satoru Iwata were here right now, he might say to them that if you only focus on where you want to go but ignore where you are now, you might overlook something wiiimportant along the way.
DS Ware Lays Down the Foundation

Upon encountering a large patch of grass where people had worn a path across, a wise man gave me the following gem of advice: “There are two types of engineers in this world; Those who would put up a fence, and those who would create a walkway.” The meaning is clear: Always study the root causes of a problem to reveal the deeper solutions within.
This is exactly what Nintendo has done with their new DSi design. They paved a road deep into the world of piracy and provided a path most gamers will happily tread instead of roughing it through the seedy alternatives.
A Road Deep into the Heart of Piracy
If you’ve ever seen a pirate gaming directory it’s quite staggering the sheer quantity of games. Not just the ones you’ve seen and read about but literally hundreds you never even knew existed. It’s like swallowing the Red Pill and having your eyes opened for the first time. Why should this be limited to pirates?

DS Ware could provide the same experience for everyone! No longer are you limited to the shelf space and availability at your local retailer but hundreds of games, all at your fingertips, ready to buy at a moments notice.
DS Ware also makes it easy to download demos directly to your memory card bringing gamers everywhere the opportunity to try out larger variety of games which leads to increased sales.
I’d like to see them emulate the piracy model even further by allowing all games to be downloaded but limit them to only 10 minutes per day, or something along those lines. This enables game companies to provide demos for all their games without having to create a specific version just for the demo. It completely guts the advantage pirates have today of trying out all games before they buy, if ever.
Analyst Matthew Fassler of Goldman Sachs recently sounded the early warning detection alarm that:
Nintendo’s newest gaming platform is a “tangible early threat” to physical portable game systems, which rely on cartridge-type slots to load games.
That could spell trouble for Best Buy and other retailers, like Circuit City Stores Inc. and GameStop Corp., which sell video games in their own stores.
The DS: A Victim of its Own Success
The greatest thing about the DS is its extraordinary variety of games, many at budget prices. Pretty soon you own a big ‘ole pile of games and are forced to play “Predict What You’ll Want To Play Today” every time you leave the house. First you buy some cases that hold four games, then ones that hold 36. But the fundamental problem remains: You don’t want to be lugging around your entire collection everywhere you go and fumbling around with the cartridges- especially for a portable device. Never again!
Flashcarts & the New DSi
One of the most compelling reasons to own a flashcart is transferring all your games onto one memory card. No more choosing which games to take with you. No more trying to find that cartridge you left in a shirt pocket last week. No more missing out when that urge to play Spelling Challenge finally strikes.
The DSi provides this exact functionality! With encryption and removable storage it should be possible to carry around your entire game collection in one or only a few memory cards. Think of how nice it will be to scroll through your list and pick out that perfect game you’re in the mood to play, where you want to play it. This feature alone will deter most people from reaching for flashcarts in the first place. This ladies and gentlemen is a Home Run for Nintendo.
End of the Line for the DS?
Timing is everything and Nintendo has timed the DSi launch perfectly with the end in site for the DS generation. We have perhaps one to two years left before we see its successor- let’s call it the DS2- scream out of the starting gates ready to accept the baton from its deliriously successful sibling. This means DS Ware and its DRM software can almost be considered beta testing for the real deal when sales finally slow down enough for the big N to unleash the DS2. It provides them the freedom to experiment, try different business models and collect usage data, all which will greatly contribute to a positive DS2 experience. Contrast their position to that of Sony’s who had a heavy burden of expectations placed upon PSN with little testing before the launch of the PS3. It also gives a heads up to developers of DS2 software to get used to the cameras, which will surely be part of the DS2.
Say Cheese
We older folks with our snazzy iPhones look down upon the DSi’s dual integrated cameras, meager media capabilities and shrug our shoulders and say “so what?” If you are among them then I’m sorry to be the one to break it to you but you need new glasses my friend since you are clearly short-sighted. The DSi is not trying to be an iPhone and those digital cameras are about to be put to use like we’ve never seen before. Remember a big slice of DS users spend a good chunk of their lives in classrooms, and where you have classrooms you have students, and where you have students you have endless uses for cameras that can talk to each other. What is the price of a picture of your hated enemy in a compromising position plus a cartoon editor? Priceless! What is the value of spontaneous video conferencing broadcasting
picture-in-picture video commentary? We may even need to invent a new name for interviews captured with DSis.
You can’t play games all the time and many adults need something for their DSs to do throughout the day while they’re out earning money for more games. With the improved networking capabilities the DSi makes for great portable security cameras that can send what they see back to where you are via. the internet. Why not check up on Fluffy to see what she’s up to all day while you’re at work, or your rowdy teenage sons after school? If millions paid for Nintendogs, they will surely pay to watch their own pets and children while they’re away at work, or on vacation, or watching their vacation home. Last time I checked DSiSpy.com is still available. Please send the royalty checks c/o GamesILike, thank you.

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Best GBA Ever?
Gameboy Advance games may be on the verge of staging a comeback. With its upgraded internal RAM the DSi should be capable of playing GBA games downloaded directly from DSi Shop. If you think GBA games are old news, think again: Many GBA titles stand up perfectly fine to their DS brethren like Metal Gear, Astro Boy, the Metroid games, Castlevania, Fire Emblem, and plenty of others. If the price is right the DSi could be the best GBA eva!
In Conclusion
Hopefully it’s clear why the DSi is a strong addition to the Nintendo family and how it lays the groundwork for their future strategy with the roll-out of DS Ware. They’ve made deep inroads into the world of piracy and learned many valuable lessons and then applied them to their new DS Ware service. Nintendo not only countered piracy itself but removed most of the fundamental advantages to pirating in the first place, all while dramatically improving the gaming experience for legitimate gamers. They created a beautiful path right through where everyone was cutting across.

Comments:
I actually remember a time when the GBA came out that i sent an email to Nintendo asking for some way to hold games on the actual system , rather then carrying many carts around. When the flashcard came out , i saw it as the ability to store all my games on a handly device. Since then i sold my dslite , got a psp , and eventually i’ll have both.
The DSi doesn’t hold much interest to me , as you said in a sense , this is more of a beta test for the next step. I don’t enjoy spending lots of money to be part of a beta test. I think nintendo and sony both are clearly understanding a market for portable gaming needs to keep things small. But really what sounds the best. A ds with lots of games on it , that when you trade in , its worth 100 bucks, the games are worth nothing. A ds with lots of games on carts, thats worth 100 bucks , and each game is worth another 10. OR a ds with a huge amount of games , and when you sell its worth 100 bucks , the flashcard you use , you can sell on ebay for another 50.
Yes the Nintendo DS is the best handheld console, but the next PSP is coming out later this year called PSPPro which is going to be awesome. My favourite console is the PS3.
Hi , Happy Valentine’s Day!!!
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