At least wait to see what else gets revealed... I mean what is there apart from Zelda?
Quote from: Big Boss on January 13, 2017, 03:26:03 AMAt least wait to see what else gets revealed... I mean what is there apart from Zelda?Are you not excited to play non-remastered Skyrim on the road for 2 hours???
This shouldn't be surprising. Nintendo has the mentality of a toy company and because of this they deliberately don't meet the consumers demand and create artificial scarcity. This was seen quiet a bit with the wii, amiibos, and most recently the NES classic where most stores received under 10 units at a time.
Quote from: LC on January 13, 2017, 05:35:06 AMThis shouldn't be surprising. Nintendo has the mentality of a toy company and because of this they deliberately don't meet the consumers demand and create artificial scarcity. This was seen quiet a bit with the wii, amiibos, and most recently the NES classic where most stores received under 10 units at a time.I suppose with headlines of them being sold out it would create interest for people who wonders why they seem so popular. Kind of smart actually.Certainly better than overestimating the demand and having headlined of low percentages sold.
Quote from: Velox on January 13, 2017, 05:39:31 AMQuote from: LC on January 13, 2017, 05:35:06 AMThis shouldn't be surprising. Nintendo has the mentality of a toy company and because of this they deliberately don't meet the consumers demand and create artificial scarcity. This was seen quiet a bit with the wii, amiibos, and most recently the NES classic where most stores received under 10 units at a time.I suppose with headlines of them being sold out it would create interest for people who wonders why they seem so popular. Kind of smart actually.Certainly better than overestimating the demand and having headlined of low percentages sold.They did the same shit for the Nintendo Classic - all stores ran out of the consoles and scumbags were selling it for almost 1k on Ebay and other sites like that. This strategy did not work out for them with N64 because the Playstation was in stock and it sold a fuck ton. Its just Nintendo being Nintendo.
Did the system sell out due to a lot of buyers or is it simply because Nintendo didn't stock enough systems for demand?
I can finally play as Josuke
Quote from: FatherlyNick on January 13, 2017, 06:06:07 AMQuote from: Velox on January 13, 2017, 05:39:31 AMQuote from: LC on January 13, 2017, 05:35:06 AMThis shouldn't be surprising. Nintendo has the mentality of a toy company and because of this they deliberately don't meet the consumers demand and create artificial scarcity. This was seen quiet a bit with the wii, amiibos, and most recently the NES classic where most stores received under 10 units at a time.I suppose with headlines of them being sold out it would create interest for people who wonders why they seem so popular. Kind of smart actually.Certainly better than overestimating the demand and having headlined of low percentages sold.They did the same shit for the Nintendo Classic - all stores ran out of the consoles and scumbags were selling it for almost 1k on Ebay and other sites like that. This strategy did not work out for them with N64 because the Playstation was in stock and it sold a fuck ton. Its just Nintendo being Nintendo.I'm not defending their behavior, just saying it's smart from a business standpoint. The main function of companies is to make money, after all.edit: somehow this comment got an edit from another comment, what the fuck?
Quote from: Velox on January 13, 2017, 06:10:06 AMQuote from: FatherlyNick on January 13, 2017, 06:06:07 AMQuote from: Velox on January 13, 2017, 05:39:31 AMQuote from: LC on January 13, 2017, 05:35:06 AMThis shouldn't be surprising. Nintendo has the mentality of a toy company and because of this they deliberately don't meet the consumers demand and create artificial scarcity. This was seen quiet a bit with the wii, amiibos, and most recently the NES classic where most stores received under 10 units at a time.I suppose with headlines of them being sold out it would create interest for people who wonders why they seem so popular. Kind of smart actually.Certainly better than overestimating the demand and having headlined of low percentages sold.They did the same shit for the Nintendo Classic - all stores ran out of the consoles and scumbags were selling it for almost 1k on Ebay and other sites like that. This strategy did not work out for them with N64 because the Playstation was in stock and it sold a fuck ton. Its just Nintendo being Nintendo.I'm not defending their behavior, just saying it's smart from a business standpoint. The main function of companies is to make money, after all.edit: somehow this comment got an edit from another comment, what the fuck?Is it though? In the end, all you're really doing is making people wait. I can see this work if you expect low sales but this is not why Nintendo is doing it (I'm sure the Swap will sell well). Scumbags will once again sell it on ebay for 3k % profit.
I wonder what verb thinks of the paid online :^)
Looked more into it This honestly looks really bad