BishopLamont said:I brought it up ey?
You brought up the importance of Sony and Square Enix on the PS2, yes. I brought up Nintendo itself winding down support on the DS -- you yourself said, and I quote, that they are "the primary driver of DS sales." So you think they're the primary driver and that having a vastly abbreviated support window won't impact future sales? I respectfully disagree.
BishopLamont said:The DS is selling nearly 600k in February, does it matter who supports it when Nintendo's software is more then enough to drive such high sales?
If Nintendo is cutting support, then yes, it matters -- and if Nintendo's software is enough to drive such high sales, then of course it will have an impact if they only have an abbreviated window of support. Can you stick to a coherent argument?
BishopLamont said:You assume the DS needs boat loads of hardcore games like the PS2 to continue to sell when in fact it doesn't, it's the casual games that sells the console.
The PS2 sold off of plenty of casual software to the casual audience, too. What do you think of Madden and Guitar Hero's success for the machine? Look, I thought when the Wii took over, everyone said that it was appealing to the same bloc of casuals that made the PS2 a success. Which is it? Hardcores or casuals (or both, since this is a stupidly false dichotomy and strong software support in general, across the board, is a significant factor in driving hardware)?
BishopLamont said:When the DS stops selling on the back off the software that's already released then you can say it won't achieve PS2 numbers, but this isn't the case and there's nothing to suggest it's going to happen any time soon.
The PS2 acquired a large, healthy library, and if you picked its hardware sales at any given month during its reign, in all likelihood at that time much of its sales would've been due to software already released, too. The DS isn't doing anything differently in that regard. The point is, the releases kept coming. And even now, after they've mostly stopped, the hardware is still selling on that back library. That'll happen for the DS, too -- it'll continue selling even after all software is cut off. But if software is cut off sooner, it'll reach that hardware death point sooner than the PS2 too.