A little disappointed. I got a Wii U a couple of weeks ago. Before I get lynched, I'll be the first to admit that the reasons for my disappointment were due to "not doing the research" and are largely my own fault, but here we go.
I'm currently a (mature) student and so don't have too much money, but my wife wanted to buy me a birthday present (it's my first birthday since we got married so she wanted something "special"). No way we could afford a PS4 or XB1, but I considered getting a Wii U. I even posted a thread here asking for advice. I decided I wasn't going to, then later I thought what the hell. (I haven't bought a new console close to the release date since the Dreamcast, and it's easy to feel the WiiU is new despite being nearly two years old).
The two main features I was excited for were:
1) Backwards compatibility. I'd not had a Nintendo console since the N64, so the chance of being able to play both the current and the previous generation's games.
2) Being able to play games on the gamepad while either lying in bed or sitting on the sofa in the living room (and hence making my wife feel slightly less like a video game widow)
Now the example that Nintendo always gave with the gamepad is that you would be playing on the TV, then someone would come into the room wanting to watch a programme and you could continue to play on the gamepad. Actually what I want to do is have the gamepad in a completely seperate room, turn it on and continue to play the game I was playing before which I've left in the machine, without touching the TV at all. As it is I have to go into the office, turn on the TV and console, boot up the game and go into the menu to turn it onto gamepad-only mode, turn the TV off again and then return to the bedroom.
Now the irony of the WiiU is that the only games console that has backwards compatibility is the only one that had radically different controls from the previous generation. So while I knew I'd need a Wiimote controller, I forgot about the sensor bar, and then having gotten the sensor bar, I then realized I needed a nunchuck to play certain other games. (As I say "didn't do the research"). While I realized I couldn't play motion controlled games on the gamepad, I'd assumed that games which have a standard control scheme could be played like Super Mario Bros Wii or Donkey Kong Country Returns. Unfortunately both these games (and I'm beginning to suspect many others) have nearly completely pointless shaking controls for bashing the ground or picking up barrels. Things which could have easily been assigned to a button but weren't. So they have to be played with the Wiimote, which means you have to be in the same room as the sensor bar, which removes the reason for playing on the gamepad in the first place.
Now given that I'm on a tight budget, when I got the console I bought mainly Wii games (Twilight Princess, SMB Wii, DK Country, Super Mario Galaxy and Kirby's Epic Yarn) and a couple of cheap Wii U games (Assassin's Creed III and Batman Arkham Origins, not the greatest games in their respective series I know but they were cheap) While I've enjoyed playing the two WiiU games on the gamepad, its fair to say they're not very Nintendo-ey. Now maybe I should buy Super Mario Bros 3D World or DK Tropical Freeze, but these games are £30+ even second hand at the moment and I feel I can't justify spending that amount of money on them when they are basically the same games as their Wii predecessors. It gets even more bizarre for Zelda, where for Windwaker HD I'd be paying top dollar for a remake of previous previous generation game to play instead of my previous generation game.
Couple this with the fact New Super Mario Bros Wii is bloody awful and the Wii controller is bloody awful (seriously its like the old NES controller only with smaller buttons, why is Mario's run and fireball command still on the same button, why!) and despite Nintendo's reputation for 2D platformers, none of the 3 platformer I bought is better than Rayman Origins or Super Meat Boy (though DK Returns is darn close) then I'm feeling a tad disappointed. I could be mollified by Nintendo's back catalogue, but there are no N64 games (and there are never likely to be Rare games anyway) on there and the SNES games, at £5 a pop, are too expensive to really justify.
Anyway, I realize that a lot of my problems are a result of maybe unrealistic expectations and my unique situations. I'm graduating in the next couple of weeks and have a job lines up, so once my financial situation has improved and I've completed the Wii prequels, I might be much more inclined to view the WiiU favourably.
But yes, I am currently disappointed with my new console purchase.
(Incidently if it is possible to do any of the things I'm complaining about not being able to do, I'd be very happy to hear how)
I'm currently a (mature) student and so don't have too much money, but my wife wanted to buy me a birthday present (it's my first birthday since we got married so she wanted something "special"). No way we could afford a PS4 or XB1, but I considered getting a Wii U. I even posted a thread here asking for advice. I decided I wasn't going to, then later I thought what the hell. (I haven't bought a new console close to the release date since the Dreamcast, and it's easy to feel the WiiU is new despite being nearly two years old).
The two main features I was excited for were:
1) Backwards compatibility. I'd not had a Nintendo console since the N64, so the chance of being able to play both the current and the previous generation's games.
2) Being able to play games on the gamepad while either lying in bed or sitting on the sofa in the living room (and hence making my wife feel slightly less like a video game widow)
Now the example that Nintendo always gave with the gamepad is that you would be playing on the TV, then someone would come into the room wanting to watch a programme and you could continue to play on the gamepad. Actually what I want to do is have the gamepad in a completely seperate room, turn it on and continue to play the game I was playing before which I've left in the machine, without touching the TV at all. As it is I have to go into the office, turn on the TV and console, boot up the game and go into the menu to turn it onto gamepad-only mode, turn the TV off again and then return to the bedroom.
Now the irony of the WiiU is that the only games console that has backwards compatibility is the only one that had radically different controls from the previous generation. So while I knew I'd need a Wiimote controller, I forgot about the sensor bar, and then having gotten the sensor bar, I then realized I needed a nunchuck to play certain other games. (As I say "didn't do the research"). While I realized I couldn't play motion controlled games on the gamepad, I'd assumed that games which have a standard control scheme could be played like Super Mario Bros Wii or Donkey Kong Country Returns. Unfortunately both these games (and I'm beginning to suspect many others) have nearly completely pointless shaking controls for bashing the ground or picking up barrels. Things which could have easily been assigned to a button but weren't. So they have to be played with the Wiimote, which means you have to be in the same room as the sensor bar, which removes the reason for playing on the gamepad in the first place.
Now given that I'm on a tight budget, when I got the console I bought mainly Wii games (Twilight Princess, SMB Wii, DK Country, Super Mario Galaxy and Kirby's Epic Yarn) and a couple of cheap Wii U games (Assassin's Creed III and Batman Arkham Origins, not the greatest games in their respective series I know but they were cheap) While I've enjoyed playing the two WiiU games on the gamepad, its fair to say they're not very Nintendo-ey. Now maybe I should buy Super Mario Bros 3D World or DK Tropical Freeze, but these games are £30+ even second hand at the moment and I feel I can't justify spending that amount of money on them when they are basically the same games as their Wii predecessors. It gets even more bizarre for Zelda, where for Windwaker HD I'd be paying top dollar for a remake of previous previous generation game to play instead of my previous generation game.
Couple this with the fact New Super Mario Bros Wii is bloody awful and the Wii controller is bloody awful (seriously its like the old NES controller only with smaller buttons, why is Mario's run and fireball command still on the same button, why!) and despite Nintendo's reputation for 2D platformers, none of the 3 platformer I bought is better than Rayman Origins or Super Meat Boy (though DK Returns is darn close) then I'm feeling a tad disappointed. I could be mollified by Nintendo's back catalogue, but there are no N64 games (and there are never likely to be Rare games anyway) on there and the SNES games, at £5 a pop, are too expensive to really justify.
Anyway, I realize that a lot of my problems are a result of maybe unrealistic expectations and my unique situations. I'm graduating in the next couple of weeks and have a job lines up, so once my financial situation has improved and I've completed the Wii prequels, I might be much more inclined to view the WiiU favourably.
But yes, I am currently disappointed with my new console purchase.
(Incidently if it is possible to do any of the things I'm complaining about not being able to do, I'd be very happy to hear how)