Around and around we go

At theBristol Games Hubin South West England, Eidos president Ian Livingstonedoled out lessonsto both industry newcomers and industry vets. But it was his choice words to Kyoto giant Nintendo that raised eyebrows.

“Nintendo should have their IP on every platform,” Livingstone said, repeating the same “Nintendo should go third party” mantra we’ve heard ad nauseam over the past decade. “Otherwise a whole generation of young people will miss out on their games.”

Article image

Oh yes, please think of the children who wouldn’t be able to experience the magic of Mario, even though nothing is stopping them frombuying Nintendo hardware. This song and dance has long gotten tired. Where is the evidence that Nintendo could be more successful by becoming a third-party publisher? I could go down the big list of reasons why such a move makes zero sense, but we’ve gone over this so, so, so many times. If it hasn’t sunk in by now, there’s no point discussing further.

Perhaps Eidos should lead by example and putitsIP on Nintendo platforms. Oh, I forgot about the two-year lateDeus Ex: Human Revolutionport. Eidos totally has its bases covered.

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

Ian Livingstone: Nintendo risks losing an entire generation unless it works on other platforms[PocketGamer.biz viaNeoGAF]

BO7 key art

yordles animation still image

Destiny 2 Solstice 2025 armor

Hell is Us gameplay reveal

Black Ops 6 Season 5 Multiplayer Ransack Mode

Tekken Tag Tournament 2: a black and white Jin and Heihachi stand back-to-back.

PEAK Bing Bong plushie

GigabyteMon