Fredescu said:
I doubt 5th Cell are developing on consoles for "respect". Are you prepared to call their move "idiotic"?
I'm pretty sure I called it "ill-advised" when they announced it, so, actually, yeah, I guess I am? Given their success on the DS so far, I don't see much reason to unconditionally abandon the platform forevermore other than the general sickness that's too common in Western developers: the idea that only console (and moreso, HD console) games are truly "legitimate."
(Note: I'm specifically not questioning the decision to develop console games, but rather the statement that they were
done forever with the DS.)
I doubt there is a one size fits all road to success for developers.
But... why are you arguing with me then, when my initial statement was that the one-size-fits-all belief that
every developer needs to move inexorably towards console, and especially HD console, retail games in order to be doing "real development" was dumb?
Deku said:
Your definition of co-marketing appears to bend to whatever you want it to be
My perception is that you are attempting to maintain a separation and duality between "co-marketing" and "moneyhats" here, to support a contention that there's good "co-marketing" (which everybody does so it's not even worth talking about) and then there's bad "moneyhats" (which are straight cash dumps of millions of dollars and Nintendo doesn't do because they're a bad idea/they ruin the industry/insert reason here.) I disagree that these are anything but elements on a shared continuum.
So let's use a different word: I'll choose "sensuous massages." There's a huge range of sensuous massages, starting from relatively minor exchanges of back-scratching in discussion of the marketing of completed products right before release, through various long-term placement campaigns and developer support throughout the process, and up to huge grants like completely covering the totality of a game's marketing budget far in advance in order to influence its platform. From the perspective of a platform-holder, these different sensuous massages aren't all separate, siloed-off activities; they are all part of a single process of third-party relations and they all feed off of and support one another.
This leak was originally cited essentially to establish one thing: that there's a constant stream of little quid pro quos and agreements going on between platform-holders and third-parties, and that this
is already an established and inevitable part of the business. The idea was never to prove that Nintendo "isn't" doing anything like this; almost exactly the opposite -- that they already are doing things like this, that there is no
qualitative difference between giving people spots at E3 and boxshots in ads and the other, more elaborate forms of publisher support, and so the debate is really regarding
how aggressive Nintendo should be in this area, not whether they should do it (because they already do).
Anyway, no offense was intended and I do apologize if I suggested a personal attack there rather than a factual disagreement.