Topic: Mobile

Each post below is tagged with
  • Company/Division names
  • Topics
  • and
  • Narratives
  • as appropriate.
    Hands-on with Nintendo Switch: Jack of all trades, master of some | Ars Technica (Jan 14, 2017)

    This early review pours some cold water on the enthusiasm that’s generally met the launch of the Switch. The lack of games, controllers which are awkward in some configurations and games, underpowered hardware for the console mode, and other issues are highlighted here. It feels as though Nintendo decided to get the Switch out the door as quickly as possible rather than waiting the usual long period from launch to release so as to allow more games to be ready – so far, the reaction I’m seeing to that paucity of games is pretty negative, so we’ll see how this works out for Nintendo over time. There seems to have been decent pre-order interest, but we’ll have to see how those early buyers actually like the devices when they get them.

    via Hands-on with Nintendo Switch: Jack of all trades, master of some | Ars Technica

    Why Super Mario’s Run Was Short – WSJ (Jan 2, 2017)

    The headline is overstating things – it’s not like Super Mario Run is done. But there are some good numbers in here – notably that 3% of the estimated 90 million downloads have converted to being paying users. At $10, that’s actually pretty high, and Nintendo will do just fine if it can keep converting new users at that rate. However, the poor reviews – many driven by the IAP model – may prevent Nintendo from continuously filling its funnel. Definitely some lessons here for future Nintendo mobile games.

    via Why Super Mario’s Run Was Short – WSJ

    How Pokémon Go is trying to lure back the millions who have abandoned it – Recode (Nov 28, 2016)

    The owners of Pokemon Go were never likely to struggle to get people to download the game – with such a rapid rise to enormous popularity, the challenge was always going to be keeping people actively using the game, and at this point it’s about getting people who’ve abandoned it to come back.

    via How Pokémon Go is trying to lure back the millions who have abandoned it – Recode