Tuesday, August 25th 2015
Next Gen Nintendo Console to Do Away with Optical Disc Media
Nintendo's upcoming high-performance game console, codenamed "Nintendo NX," could be the first major console in 15 years to completely do away with optical disc media. Patent applications covering the console, filed in February by Nintendo, with the USPTO, and unearthed by NeoGAF, describe a console that "is not provided with an optical disc drive." Nintendo is expected to reveal the NX some time in 2016.
This points at a new direction in which Nintendo wants to guide the console gaming industry - one in which an Internet connection is mandatory, games are bought from a centralized marketplace online, downloaded to your console's local storage (HDDs/SSDs), and played. DLCs and in-game purchases are as seamless as possible, and game progress, settings, etc., are stored on the cloud. Such a system already existed for close to a decade, with Xbox Live and PSN, but Nintendo NX will be the first platform to completely do away with optical disc media. This method could also curb piracy, since the only way your console can receive games to play is through that online marketplace.
Sources:
USPTO, NeoGAF
This points at a new direction in which Nintendo wants to guide the console gaming industry - one in which an Internet connection is mandatory, games are bought from a centralized marketplace online, downloaded to your console's local storage (HDDs/SSDs), and played. DLCs and in-game purchases are as seamless as possible, and game progress, settings, etc., are stored on the cloud. Such a system already existed for close to a decade, with Xbox Live and PSN, but Nintendo NX will be the first platform to completely do away with optical disc media. This method could also curb piracy, since the only way your console can receive games to play is through that online marketplace.
46 Comments on Next Gen Nintendo Console to Do Away with Optical Disc Media
Agreed on planned obsolescence - the only way this is NOT a major issue is if the console that replaces it works with your account and can natively run the older titles.
Found it, left it in my jeans in the washer/dryer.
I always thought someone Sony/Microsoft/Nintendo would go the USB flash device for the marketing potential of it.
Game in a USB characters figure
FACEPALM
Did they NOT watch what happened to microsoft when they tried this? an always online system will FAIL if the country's internet connectivity isnt up to snuff. and america's connectivity is a joke. Our broadband infrastructure is pathetically behind the times, with BS data caps to boot. People don't WANT an always online system with overpriced online marketplaces and connectivity DRM. we want good games.
It's like nintendo is making the same stupid mistakes as the other guys, but 5 years later. and guide the industry? nintendo, you are currently in a distant third place. you are in no position to "guide the industry". why is it that every japanese gaming company has gone full stupid recently?
I, for one, cannot WAIT for this to crash and burn.
Bandwith can be an issue if you still have slow xDSL connection beacuse a lot of people still get their WAN lines into a village by copper, hell some people in the cities around the world have only xDSL available (although faster) becaue optical fibre is only available in blocks.
I do feel pity for people in America using fibre but have their data limit at 300 GB per month or similar, if I had this limit I would rather buy a server or a few (and still get them cheaper by amount of data I would transfer) and get the lowest possible speed available at Comcast or similar bastards. At least in Europe (excluding internet-censored UK) data cap limits are not so widespread (never heard for one) where they have fibre. This is not possible, because random read/write is too slow and if they want fast random read/write they have to buy better SD cards. And if I remember correctly isn't only sequential read/write defined in classification?
Also Xbox Live and PSN are huge in the US (Gaming's biggest Market) and we essentially have zero caps on our internet. Nintendo might be taking a gamble......or they might be pushing the envelope yet again. Time will tell. You never know with Nintendo.
@btarunr The fact you used a NES as this articles main image made me happy man. Most people would have used a WiiU or something newer. Can't beat that 1985 style! Trust me I beat mine with anything in reach. SHE STILL RUNS TODAY!
The only thing that will screw Nintendo over on this, is if they don't go x86. The next system HAS to be x86.
So if anyone could answer that question i'd love to hear it.
If I remember right there was talk about a lawsuit since it was an advertised feature. But in the end nothing really happened for the users.
Games in USB stick are the best option IMO.