The revolution will be televised, but not freee

stack99

Established Member
http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=9389

No free lunch on Nintendo's next-gen system, but bonuses and free trials are on the menu

Nintendo president Satoru Iwata has denied rumours that the company plans to distribute its first-party back catalogue for free on the forthcoming Revolution console, but said that some old games may be used as bonus or trial content.

Speaking to a business strategy conference in Japan, Iwata touched briefly on the topic of the "Virtual Console" - Nintendo's name for the Revolution's ability to download and play the company's old titles.

Referring specifically to online rumours that the company would give away its back catalogue for free on the service, Iwata said that "we have no plans to distribute [our back catalogue] without a fee."

He would not be drawn on what pricing schemes the firm has in mind, but he did concede that some games might be used as promotional bonuses - for example, offering a free download of an old game with the purchase of a new game, or running special marketing campaigns which allow games to be downloaded for free for a limited period.

This is in line with Nintendo's policy on old games at present; while the firm makes a profit from the sale of its back catalogue through schemes like the NES Classics range on the GBA, it's also not averse to bundling old titles as bonus content with their modern updates.

Iwata made clear that the ultimate motive for the Revolution download service is to continue to capitalise on Nintendo's back catalogue, telling the conference that "we hope to create a system which allows both Nintendo and [third-party publishers] to make a profit by using [software titles] from the past."

Interestingly, the Nintendo boss also confirmed that Revolution users will be able to download demos for the Nintendo DS to the console and then transfer them wirelessly to their handhelds.

Much of the rest of the conference, however, was recycled material from Iwata's presentation at E3 in Los Angeles last month, with products such as the Game Boy Advance Micro and the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection service for the DS, both of which made their debuts at E3, being unveiled for the first time in the Far East.
 
Considering the hype that the rumour of free older games produced, Nintendo would be crazy not to release at least a handful of popular games for free at launch.
 
I agree, they should do some sort of pack in deal with it, like 5free games dl's or something. Would make sense, and is much easier than actually shipping a physical game with the system.

I think anyone with half a brain though would sorta know that Nintendo, or any company for that matter, isn't going to offer something of that nature completely free of charge. They simply said that they didn't like the idea of charging for a service like X-Box Live, so they may go the route of itunes and charge per download rather than per month.
 
The only problem with a system like Napster, is you don't own the product. You rent it. And if you cancel the sybscription, the product stops working.
 
Does anyone know how these downloads will work? Will they be stored on a memory card or a hard drive, or will you have to download the games each time you want to play them?
 
I assume they will probably be stored in the flash memory space of the Revolution, but it may very well be that you will have to be online to authenticate each time you want to play the games. Pretty similar to how Steam works, in other words.
 
Back
Top