Maybe, but I think Sony's happier for it to compete on its own merits alongside existing controllers, and for it to grow naturally over time if it's something people gravitate towards, rather than trying to hasten things. If it is actually good or actually has some advantages over the traditional controller, then it will succeed over time in winning enough people over. I think Sony's confident that'll happen.
I'll buy a Move for KZ3, because I suck with dual analog. And I'm sure there's other more casual players who'd do the same. I'll buy a Move for RUSE because it's - seemingly - simply the better way to play the game (at least according to most impressions I've read that don't come from Gamespot
). This is the competition, and in some cases Move will win. It doesn't need to be given a handicap. (Or at least it doesn't if you're maybe thinking more long term).
I think you will see bigger dedicated games, and already you will typically HAVE to buy move for certain types of game. And I'm looking forward to those games, because I think there will be some interesting stuff that comes out of a pure or primary focus on Move. But I like the more balanced approach. If you want big games to play with your Move, you will get them, they're coming. The fact that they support a traditional gamepad also is kind of irrelevant if it's Move you want to use.