Gamecube controller for wii u games
GameStop and Wedbush Morgan analyst Michael Pachter were saying the industry scuttlebutt even had one of those consoles slipping into 2014.įor the first time since the NES, Nintendo had the opportunity to set the pace for a console generation. But that microconsole wasn't supposed to launch until March of 2013, and Sony and Microsoft hadn't even announced their next systems, suggesting they wouldn't arrive until roughly a year after Wii U hit shelves. People were desperate for something new, as we saw a couple months prior with the unbridled enthusiasm around the Ouya. Nintendo was readying the Wii U for a holiday release, when it would be the first new console on shelves in six years. The Wii U was going to be the first new console on shelves in six yearsīut things were different 10 years ago this month. Nintendo's track record of releasing systems whenever it was good and ready rather than feeling rushed by the competition felt very in character for a company with a track record of doing its own thing, from sticking with cartridges after others switched to CD-ROMs to adding a second screen to a handheld to reinventing the fundamental user interface with the Wii Remote. The Wii hit stores alongside the PlayStation 3, but a year after Microsoft's Xbox 360. The GameCube arrived a year after the PlayStation 2 and two years after Sega's Dreamcast. The Nintendo 64 arrived fashionably late to the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn generation. The Super Nintendo trailed the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive into stores. Historically speaking, Nintendo had not really been a big believer in the early mover advantage.