dave4shmups wrote:I have no problem paying for old games when they are copyrighted material; rather then public domain. There are plenty of games, like Sword of Mana, that would cost you upwards of $60 on Ebay, that are available for less then $10 on the VC.
As far as Nintendo's strategy goes, they won't change it as long as they continue to rake in more money then MS and Sony combined. As a Wii owner, I don't like it one bit, but that's how it goes.
Really, though, this generation sucks overall, I'm tired of the shovelware (mostly on Wii), and I have little desire to shell out for an HDTV and a 360 or PS3. Ok, so I don't have the money, but even if I did, screw it; the Genesis, NES, and Atari are more entertaining and less expensive.
Finally, someone who agrees with me on the whole VC thing. =)
I do agree that a lot of the Wii games suck ass...but that's where I, a consumer, come in, filter out the suck-assiness, and search for games that don't suck.
Wii/Ware games aren't all bad; there's goodies like the Trauma Center series, GHOST Squad, Star Soldier R (even if the price is a bit steep), Mega Man 9 (even if some think 8-bit is garbage), and I'm looking forward to Sin & Punishment 2.
The Wii has a lot of potential to be a great system. It's just that there's not enough developers who take it seriously and instead produce cheap party games for it. GHOST Squad and S&P2 show that rail shooters finally have a place. Red Steel may have been crappy in its execution, but it showed a new, immersive way to play FPS's. VC gives gamers like me a chance to play games that we enjoyed in our childhood or missed out on without the guilt of piracy or the difficulty of hunting down the original carts (and paying potentially high prices for them upon finding them).