So 2023 then?Wrong key.
I hit wrong key.
So 2023 then?
That depends if her driver's license had a similar typo on it.Don't tell me you've never made a mistake on a Sunday morning!
... friendly neighbourhood Nintendo programming.
I think we just found the new gimmick that Nintendo will be using with Nintendo NX -- physical cartridges.
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This is probably for the portable version of the NX ( which will be the successor to Nintendo's current portable), you don't want a portable device that could be dropped and has to run on the limited power of a battery to rely on a delicate spinning 16.5GB mini-BD disc. Formfactor issues as well. With no moving/mechanical parts and with kids as the target audience having solid state media will reduce warrantee issues and much heartache from falls/drops as well.Wow, they can't possibly be that lame.
If some solid state storage imposes higher costs for games publishers, it'll be the N64 situation again, when the competitors were using optical to save on costs and Nintendo tried to hold onto the cartridge model.
Nintendo no longer manufactures cartridges. Macronix supplies them with cartridges. They own no shares of Macronix. Macronix generates +4x the revenue of Nintendo. So they will not be buying Macronix.I'm wondering though if it will boost Nintendo's margins. Under the cartridge model, third parties had to pay Nintendo to do the manufacturing for them, so they incurred risk if games didn't sell and there were a lot of cartridges sitting in warehouses.
They should be doing everything to attract third parties.
The should port ET to the NX just so they can have a new special to release in 20 years, digging up landfills to find a few million more ET NX cartridges.
Wow, they can't possibly be that lame.
If some solid state storage imposes higher costs for games publishers, it'll be the N64 situation again, when the competitors were using optical to save on costs and Nintendo tried to hold onto the cartridge model.
I think we just found the new gimmick that Nintendo will be using with Nintendo NX -- physical cartridges.
ArsTechnica Article:
The savvy reporters at British media-reporting site Screen Critics were first to notice a major financial report from Macronix, a Japanese company that has provided memory-related chips to consoles as far back as the N64. Macronix had already commented on serving as a chip supplier of some sort for Nintendo NX in January of this year, but in speaking about its current fiscal year (which, for Japanese companies, ends in March 2017), the company spoke about higher expectations for its "NOR Flash" business linked to the launch of the new Nintendo hardware.
This leaves open the possibility that Macronix will simply provide the kind of BIOS or system memory chips that it has made for systems such as the Wii U and PlayStation 4. Still, the announcement's verbiage hints to an expected jump in sales percentage around the NX's launch window that would make more sense if linked to software sales, as opposed to console sales—assuming an average games-to-console sales ratio of over 2:1, at any rate.
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Well, the original VCS had "64-color"*, so Nintendo NX would be a decent upgrade from 1977-era tech...only if its 128 bit color
I don't see the point in different sized carts. It would just fragment Nintendo's ecosystem without any benefits to it. A tiny cart can already hold more solid-state memory than would be economically feasible to sell to the public. ...Unless Nintendo wants to go back to the era of $90 games cartridges, but I doubt they'd be keen on that. They'd get laughed out of their own headquarters.My guess is that NX will be cartridge based and have a cartridge slot that accepts both a physically smaller NX handheld carts and physically larger NX console carts.
I don't see the point in different sized carts. It would just fragment Nintendo's ecosystem without any benefits to it. A tiny cart can already hold more solid-state memory than would be economically feasible to sell to the public. ...Unless Nintendo wants to go back to the era of $90 games cartridges, but I doubt they'd be keen on that. They'd get laughed out of their own headquarters.
Are you sure about that? I've heard nothing from Nintendo suggesting this. Quite the opposite really, since NX is supposed to be a shared ecosystem and Nintendo has explicitly stated this, so that development for the handheld can overlap with the home console and other way around. (Which means I will finally get to play Luigi's Mansion 3, when it releases for NX!)The point is that not all NX console games will be able to be playable on the handheld
Well that will be an interesting conundrum to see how Nintendo solves, won't it?How do you market a shared library?
The thing is, a cart cannot hold enough data for modern console games anyhow; upwards of 50 gigs of flash (or mask-programmed ROM) would be too expensive as a medium, assuming Nintendo aims to compete with current consoles for the home NX system.Segmenting by cart packaging size would be a way to differentiate console/handheld versions when they are not the same.