- Feb 7, 2011
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Actually I only wanted 17 of those 30 games, but buying those 17 games separately on the virtual console would cost me $85, which is more than the retail cost of the NES mini.kilenem said:You are telling me you only wanted 30 games that you couldn't pick out, a controller that was super short that required you to play two feet in front of the TV and a device that can't have more games added to it. Im only focusing on the negatives but they're pretty huge negatives.Dirty Hipsters said:[
Sure, but if I ever wanted a Wii I could have gotten one at any point in the last 10 years. The fact that I don't have one means I don't really care about all the other stuff it can do, so that's really not a selling point to me, nor is it a selling point to anyone who wanted an NES mini and can no longer get one.
Getting a Nintendo Wii to play these games would mean dropping more money on something whose only benefit is that I can then buy more things for it, things that I have thus far not wanted.
And yeah, that controller cable is absolute garbage and I have no idea how Nintendo thought it was a good idea. It works with my set-up though, as I play all my games on a monitor and would actually just be able to set the NES mini on my computer desk, and the controller would stretch to my chair perfectly.
All in all, the NES mini is just a little gimmicky thing that I would have bought and played once in a while for nostalgia sake. It's a lot easier to stomach spending $60 on that and just having a simple little plug and play toy than it is to buy a Wii, buy an HD converter for it, buy an HDMI cable, and then load my credit card onto the Wii Virtual console to buy the games I wanted. That over-complication of something that I could have done with a single purchase immediately turns me off.