So, going by the earlier graph, if Nintendo continued to have those kinds of losses for every 6-month period, it would take roughly 93 years for them to be bankrupt.
Now, obviously that's not exact - I'm sure their total figure is lower now than it was when that graph was done, But, we're still looking at around 90 years or so.
The losses are only that small because of the success of the 3DS. If the handheld market continues to erode, they'd start losing money much faster. And in any event, if you don't make a profit in 93 years, somewhere along the way shareholders are going to force you to change your business model into something that might actually be profitable.
i hope they really understand in design terms why the gamepad was not the wii remote or the ds's touch screen. it's crucial in moving forward.
Even if losses tripled, that's still looking at 30 years. (And again, that's assuming a hypothetical where, despite being a profitable company for virtually their entire existance, the losses they've had recently are now all they will ever be seeing again)
And, obviously it's not realistic at all for a company to have 90 (or even 30) years straight of losses. It's obvious something would be done about it along the way. But, the point is, they have been so profitable and have so much money built up, that people saying they're going to go bankrupt, or Sony's going to purchase them, or the company is going to be so in danger that they're going to have to act desperate in order to try to save themselves or something, are just completely unrealistic/ignoring just how much money they do have saved up and how long it would actually take for something like that to happen.
Even if losses tripled, that's still looking at 30 years. (And again, that's assuming a hypothetical where, despite being a profitable company for virtually their entire existance, the losses they've had recently are now all they will ever be seeing again)
And, obviously it's not realistic at all for a company to have 90 (or even 30) years straight of losses. It's obvious something would be done about it along the way. But, the point is, they have been so profitable and have so much money built up, that people saying they're going to go bankrupt, or Sony's going to purchase them, or the company is going to be so in danger that they're going to have to act desperate in order to try to save themselves or something, are just completely unrealistic/ignoring just how much money they do have saved up and how long it would actually take for something like that to happen.
It's time to be real. The graphs showing accumulated profits are meaningless, because that's just not how business works. (Speaking of, it's not all that relevant whether or not Sony or Microsoft are profiting, because Sony and Microsoft do not answer to Nintendo's shareholders.)
Forget 90 years or 30, it's not realistic for them to go two-plus years with losses without some sort of strategic shift. Profits from 1981, 1991, 2001, or 2009 mean absolutely nothing. That money isn't sitting in a bank account waiting for a rainy day, most of it has been spent -- reinvested or paid out to investors. And they will continue to need to reinvest and pay out dividends to investors, which will require steadily growing profitability over time. Nintendo isn't just going to sit there and bleed their cash horde.
There is going to be change at Nintendo. I'm not going to predict what that change will be, other than I don't think you'll see Iwata in charge very long into next year. I don't have the foggiest idea what they'll do, but it will not be business as usual.
Then you should read their presentations & investor Q&A.It's time to be real. The graphs showing accumulated profits are meaningless, because that's just not how business works. (Speaking of, it's not all that relevant whether or not Sony or Microsoft are profiting, because Sony and Microsoft do not answer to Nintendo's shareholders.)
Forget 90 years or 30, it's not realistic for them to go two-plus years with losses without some sort of strategic shift. Profits from 1981, 1991, 2001, or 2009 mean absolutely nothing. That money isn't sitting in a bank account waiting for a rainy day, most of it has been spent -- reinvested or paid out to investors. And they will continue to need to reinvest and pay out dividends to investors, which will require steadily growing profitability over time. Nintendo isn't just going to sit there and bleed their cash horde.
There is going to be change at Nintendo. I'm not going to predict what that change will be, other than I don't think you'll see Iwata in charge very long into next year. I don't have the foggiest idea what they'll do, but it will not be business as usual.
They tried something, it didn't work. Obviously they're going to try some other stuff. That might not work either. Then they'll try some other stuff. That also may or may not work. If not, then they'll try some more stuff. The point is, they have the ability to do that, since they have the room to work with, and to return to being extremely profitable like they have been for most of their existence.
Then you should read their presentations & investor Q&A.
I'm sorry but Nintendo putting out a ps4 (aka a 500 dollar console) would doom them even further than going the low power route. Many people here fail to think clearly. Most Third parties wouldn't put their games on the platform even if there was parity and nobody would buy a 500 dollar Nintendo console let alone a 350 dollar one. They need to aim lower not higher
As long as gaming is the primary business for Nintendo, gaming has to continually and increasingly be profitable.
If it was even close to PS4 and XBox One in architecture then developers wouldn't shun it.
Well then, it's a good thing for Nintendo that they've been the only company to be able to do that over an extended period of time.
To think that they're just going to toss in the towel after a couple of losses, despite the massive profits they've been able to make, seems extremely short-sighted.
Where someone says "change," you replace it with "toss in the towel." Maybe stop doing that?
And again, the over-reliance on past performance might work among sports fans arguing over wins and losses (I mean, seriously, I have a cousin [-in-law?] I haven't seen in 10 years, but I saw him recently and the first thing he did was remind me of Duke's bad season in college basketball in 1995), but it's useless here. The market realities that produced truly massive profits 5 years ago do not exist any longer. The world changes, and the gaming market changes with it. The reality of it is they're losing money now, their revenues are diminishing now, and the things they were doing yesterday have only gotten them to now. The people making the decisions inside Nintendo have gotten them to right now, and now isn't a good place to be, nor is it building confidence for tomorrow, and confidence in tomorrow is ultimately going to shape Nintendo's strategy going forward.
And please, when you read that paragraph, do remember the one preceding it.
I mean if they stick to their guns and release Wii-U 2 and so on that doesn't pick up traction and bankruptcy becomes a possibility (though given how much money they've made elsewhere it could take years and years) then surely another Japanese company would try snapping them up. It's a company I imagine the Japanese would want to keep ownership within the country and Sony would have the most to gain from a buyout of Nintendo.
Again, the primary issue is stuff like this, from the OP:
Talking about going bankrupt and being bought out by Sony.
I don't necessarily want Nintendo to be a software only company, but I think the belief they'd sudden collapse and produce poor quality games is a belief rooted in nonsense and hysteria, from fans with a deep rooted and nonsensical loyalty to Nintendo the company and simply refuse to even humour the possibility of Nintendo focusing exclusively on software (ironic, all things considered). Nintendo is immensely functional as both a video game publisher and developer, and would retain just as much control and freedom over their projects while third party as they do with their own hardware. It's like some people believe Nintendo limiting themselves to software would turn them into EA overnight. They're a company already bound to shareholders. And a company that already does arguably ignore them and do their own thing, for better or worse. This would not change, and with the strength and brand recognition of their IPs I don't see any scenario where third party Nintendo wouldn't see tremendous sales success on borderline any platform under the sun.
What does concern me (and caused some nonsense knee jerk defensiveness on twitter) is Nintendo's relevancy in the home console space with their current hardware vision. I like Nintendo doing their own thing, but unsuccessful Nintendo is bad for every single party involved. It's bad for Nintendo, for obvious financial reasons. It pressures them to produce content faster, and more focused on sales. And this in turn has the potential to hurt the fanbase. Panic Nintendo sucks. Comfortable Nintendo is giving me two Mario Galaxy games and greenlighting shit like Sin & Punishment 2 and Xenoblade.
What I don't want is Nintendo to stick to their own home consoles for no other reason than stubbornness, when that stubbornness may be detrimental to growth of the company as a software producer and developer. My love for Nintendo hardware is not necessarily because of the hardware itself, but the software. That's what I love about Nintendo. They need to re-approach their position in the console space for their next system, and do so in drastic ways. If that doesn't mean becoming a third party publisher, and again I don't necessarily want or expect that to happen, it does mean they need to totally reassess what they're doing for hardware and work harder to ensure relevancy. Nintendo is a relevant software producer, but for the current generation they are an irrelevant hardware producer. The latter needs to change because the former will be affected by it.
thats a pretty confident statement that is at odds with historical precedent.
the problem with the whole third party arguments is that none of the so called benefits are proven and are basically a stupid gamble with more to lose than gain even worse yet all the down sides are if we look back at history .
Looking back at history (you know, before Sega became a third party company -- most young gamers have no idea that the industry began before Nintendo starting making the NES/Famicom)...
When Activision was formed, the first third party company in the history of video gaming, they made a profit of $6 million the first year. By year two, they were up 60+ million thanks to Pitfall and quite a few other titles that pushed the limits of the Atari 2600 hardware. It helped them to survive an industry collapse and then continue their life to present day.
Yeah, history shows us that third party companies creating new IP really suck at making profits and keeping form.
Nintendo would make amazing games on amazing hardware and most loyalist to Nintendo (and there isn't anything wrong with that) would be shocked.
Glad this was bought up. Another thread had me looking at the history of the NES.....and Nintendo doing software only, being on other systems....is part of how they started making a name for themselves.... if they went back to this....it would just be coming full circle. And I think they would survive.
Glad this was bought up. Another thread had me looking at the history of the NES.....and Nintendo doing software only, being on other systems....is part of how they started making a name for themselves.... if they went back to this....it would just be coming full circle. And I think they would survive.
Well, this is Operating Income:
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Again, we're still looking at 50+ years of 2011-2014 sorts of issues before it starts to actually become an actual danger.
Obviously they wouldn't want to let that sort of thing go on for too long, but the point is, they have that cushion.
(Oh yeah, for anyone who doesn't want to count the 0s on that graph, the line near the top where their graph ends is $35 Billion)
This post is spot on. Nintendo can operate better and deliver higher quality software if they aren't desperately trying to sell a dying platform at the same time.
When Activision was formed, the first third party company in the history of video gaming, they made a profit of $6 million the first year. By year two, they were up 60+ million thanks to Pitfall and quite a few other titles that pushed the limits of the Atari 2600 hardware. It helped them to survive an industry collapse and then continue their life to present day.
Nintendo would not have the same operating capital without their hardware side. Losing hardware means massive layoffs, consolidation, downsizing. It means adopting risk-averse practices similar to EA, Activision, Square-Enix, Capcom: far more milking than they are already criticized for.
Also, EAD isn't sitting at the office thinking about how to sell Wii U. They're just making great games.
Nintendo makes far more than that in licensing fees alone, without even counting their first party sales (sales that would be subject to having to pay licensing fees if they were 3rd party). Look at their financials. They're staggering. There are years they post over a billion in profit.
Short term losses are nothing compared to that, and those profits would not be possible solely publishing 3rd party software. Even if Nintendo continued to sell 30 million NSMB units as 3rd party they would, by virtue of having to pay licensing fees, still be making less money (see earlier post for criticism of argument that they would magically sell 3x as many units of hypothetical NSMB).
Nintendo could float 3-4 more unsuccessful platforms before they have to even worry about closing up the shop. And the market isn't so treacherous that they can't find a way to make profit on their systems, even on the Wii U which has barely been on the market 12 months. Even Gamecube made healthy profit.
Which makes this discussion beyond silly, tbqhwy.
Nintendo would not have the same operating capital without their hardware side. Losing hardware means massive layoffs, consolidation, downsizing. It means adopting risk-averse practices similar to EA, Activision, Square-Enix, Capcom: far more milking than they are already criticized for.
Also, EAD isn't sitting at the office thinking about how to sell Wii U. They're just making great games.
Nintendo makes far more than that in licensing fees alone, without even counting their first party sales (sales that would be subject to having to pay licensing fees if they were 3rd party). Look at their financials. They're staggering. There are years they post over a billion in profit.
Short term losses are nothing compared to that, and those profits would not be possible solely publishing 3rd party software. Even if Nintendo continued to sell 30 million NSMB units as 3rd party they would, by virtue of having to pay licensing fees, still be making less money (see earlier post for criticism of argument that they would magically sell 3x as many units of hypothetical NSMB).
Nintendo could float 3-4 more unsuccessful platforms before they have to even worry about closing up the shop. And the market isn't so treacherous that they can't find a way to make profit on their systems, even on the Wii U which has barely been on the market 12 months. Even Gamecube made healthy profit.
Which makes this discussion beyond silly, tbqhwy.
so basically people in this thread are saying that nintendo can never make a new sucessfull home console
One thing I think people are forgetting to mention is brand quality. Even if Nintendo went third party and quality/quantity/diversity stayed the same, which we know it won't, as many people have argued just in the first 100 posts I read, their sales would still likely be lower than many are predicting.
If they reached the point where they had to quit hardware just to stay profitable, this sends the message that their games aren't good enough to maintain a console on their own. The name would be associated with failure, fall from grace, etc., at least for a few years. Mario, Zelda, Mario Kart may continue to sell, but everything else, including merchandising, would tank.
There's just way too much at risk and far too little to gain to quit hardware after one bum console out for one year. We'll talk in a decade or so but, until then, Nintendo is just fine and they're here to stay. I can't imagine how some people are still so foolish to support this from a business perspective after gamecube to Wii and the 3DS turn around. Can Gaf please get over this?
I'm sorry, this is a very uninformed viewpoint. How in the world would their games not be up to snuff? Why would they slip in quality? If anything, Nintendo would be fully focused on their games and make better titles with powerful hardware (on multiple platforms).
I know their are some Nintendo fans out there who don't want Nintendo to turn third party because of companies like Sega and their quality control/budgets, but I seriously seriously seriously doubt Nintendo would go along the same route as Sega in those categories. They would still deliver the goods to the fans the way they want it and possibly better.
Nintendo would be fully focused on their games and make better titles with powerful hardware (on multiple platforms). There would be no disgrace or bad message sent if they bowed out of the hardware business. Simply put, they would be a company that didn't want to compete with skyrocketing hardware costs and they would fully acknowledge that their budgets aren't as endless as Sony/Microsoft's.
I know their are some Nintendo fans out there who don't want Nintendo to turn third party because of companies like Sega and their quality control/budgets, but I seriously seriously seriously doubt Nintendo would go along the same route as Sega in those categories. They would still deliver the goods to the fans the way they want it and possibly better. Most people wouldn't hold it against them that they want to keep producing quality games on different platforms.
Nintendo would be fully focused on their games and make better titles with powerful hardware (on multiple platforms). There would be no disgrace or bad message sent if they bowed out of the hardware business. Simply put, they would be a company that didn't want to compete with skyrocketing hardware costs and they would fully acknowledge that their budgets aren't as endless as Sony/Microsoft's.
I know their are some Nintendo fans out there who don't want Nintendo to turn third party because of companies like Sega and their quality control/budgets, but I seriously seriously seriously doubt Nintendo would go along the same route as Sega in those categories. They would still deliver the goods to the fans the way they want it and possibly better. Most people wouldn't hold it against them that they want to keep producing quality games on different platforms.
so basically every thing would be good or better because you think it will.
There's just way too much at risk and far too little to gain to quit hardware after one bum console out for one year. We'll talk in a decade or so but, until then, Nintendo is just fine and they're here to stay. I can't imagine how some people are still so foolish to support this from a business perspective after gamecube to Wii and the 3DS turn around. Can Gaf please get over this?
If you think shareholders wouldn't react to Nintendo dropping one of their two platforms for making money, I don't know what to tell you. Their finances WILL reflect on the consequences of dropping out of 'the race'. You're also telling us 'Trust me guys, this'll turn out juuuust fine! Despite past evidence to the contrary!' Sega had to change what kind of games they made after dropping the Dreamcast. Nintendo would be no exception because they too no longer have to create prestige titles and will much more readily axe games that they think will not be sufficiently profitable.
A couple of things, not to agree or disagree with your overall argument, but Nintendo cannot sustain a decade of losses or even mediocre profitability. The company itself could survive it, but everything you know and love about that company might not.
Secondly, if Nintendo could be counted on to produce a GameCube-to-Wii type of transformation, they'd probably have skipped producing the GameCube and Wii U, don't you think? I mean, really, can we be honest here? Nintendo got the Wii correct, they nailed it. They deserve all the credit in the world for that product. That's one product, though, and its market is already gone, and immediately preceding it and following it, they've produced 2 duds. Fortunately for them, they've historically had a healthy handheld market to really carry the business through troubled home console waters. Unfortunately, even the handheld business is experiencing significant declines in both hardware and software, and so far appears to be on course to regress to near or below GBA performance levels.
The immediate predecessor and successor of the Wii are the DS and the 3DS
Sorry champ, but no, those are not replacements in the same market. But the 3DS is dud-like, so at least there's that.
so basically every thing would be good or better because you think it will.
If Nintendo went software only, i wonder if they could get away with selling their games for more than $60
No because Nintendo's strong point their entire video game life has been their first party titles. They have a strong, consistent pattern of producing kickass software (even before they had the NES).
Far more consistent than their hardware.
That is the reason why I'm confident they would do well. History shows, even at their very beginning during the arcade years, that they know how to make software better than anyone on the planet.
so again you have no fact s except what you believe
If you think shareholders wouldn't react to Nintendo dropping one of their two platforms for making money, I don't know what to tell you. Their finances WILL reflect on the consequences of dropping out of 'the race'. You're also telling us 'Trust me guys, this'll turn out juuuust fine! Despite past evidence to the contrary!' Sega had to change what kind of games they made after dropping the Dreamcast. Nintendo would be no exception because they too no longer have to create prestige titles and will much more readily axe games that they think will not be sufficiently profitable. Bayonetta 2? The Wonderful 101? SMTxFE? They're probably all non-existant in this scenario. If anything, Nintendo is more likely to drop out of the console business and stop putting games on consoles entirely; all their resources would be put into the 3DS and its inevitable successor. Why would Nintendo dilute their IPs, from their point of view?
And this brings up a good point. You've stated that you sorely want to have Nintendo's games on other platforms...why not stop and reconsider this dream? Because it appears that you're envisioning a best-case scenario where everything is peachy.
Give me a few days and I'll be happy to get numbers for you in regards to how they've done historically.
I understand that you have no argument and you present nothing but snide remarks about patterns over the last 30+ years that you obviously know nothing about. So, I don't know what you want to hear except that the patterns over Nintendo's lifetime show that it certainly survive if it went software only.
Let's turn this around, though. Nix Sega from your argument (because again, you can't compare Nintendo's decision-making to Sega's) and tell me why you don't think they can survive as a software only company.
Fire away, chief.