Crono1973 said:
To put it simply, I think the WiiU is having a poor launch and I asked people why they thought that was the case.
Ok then, because I feel like it:
1.: You think the WiiU had a poor launch. You provided two reasons:
a) the PS3 outsells the WiiU:
WiiU just isn't the Wii. When the 7 year old PS3 sells almost as many systems as a launch system it's not good.
b) The Wii sold better at it's launch
The Wii flew off of shelves, the WiiU isn't.
You do see that it wasn't necessary to "give it time" when it came to the Wii but it is with the WiiU.
Now of course, those two things cannot be argued with. What can be argued with is if those 2 observations constitute a "poor launch".
Obviously the Wii had a better launch, but neither did the PS3 nor the 360.
So rather than saying the WiiU had a poor launch one could rather say the WiiU had a normal launch.
As in it's launch was not much better or worse than most consoles bar at best a few (hard to find launch numbers on the last generation of consoles).
2.: You ask for why that is the case.
Regardless of whether or not one regards the WiiU's launch as poor, one can still try to explain why it performs worse than the Wii did at launch and the PS3 is curently.
Let's start with the PS3 because this is quite easy:
- The PS3 has a bigger library
- The PS3 is cheaper
- The WiiU's hardware is not that far ahead of the PS3.
Now to the Wii.
When the Wii launched it was neither very cheap nor very strong nor did it have a great lineup of games.
So why did it "fly of the shelves"?
It did because it tapped into a market that up until then had nothing to do with video games.
The Wii was bought by everyone except the traditional video game enthusiast.
This made for a monumentally strong launch. It also made for a launch that cannot easily be repeated.
The Wii managed to appeal to all sorts of people because it had something fundamentally unique that resonated well them.
The WiiU just hasn't.
The reasons have been given multiple times: Strange marketing decisions and a confusing name.
But above all, even the best marketing in the world could not change the fact that the WiiU just isn't as radically different from what came before it as the Wii was.
So it can't tap into a huge new market.
The WiiU has a difficult position: A lot of the people who bought a Wii are not the type to by a new new console just because it's new.
A lot of the people who do that currently own at least a 360 or a PS3 and don't have much incentive to migrate due to the reasons stated above.
So, given it's scattered audience and Nintendos strange marketing I'd say the WiiU's launch was actually surprisingly good.