The sad thing is that I LOVED Nintendo. I had an SNES when I was young, then the 64, then the Gamecube. But I just can't bring myself to buy a Wii (or Wii U) because of the motion sensing and with the U this weird controller that it now uses.
I can't rationalize spending several hundred dollars on a system that I will only use for a few games, Smash bros, whatever Zelda game comes out(especially if the Zelda games will focus so heavily on the motion sensing) , and maybe a couple of others.
On the topic of smash bros, Link FTW.
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Edited by Rocketman287: 5/7/2013 1:52:09 AMI'll be honest, I thought the Wii U was strange at first. But I played it at a friend's house 2 days ago, and its not that bad. The gamepad isn't huge like I thought(its actually the perfect size, its basically a controller with a small screen on it). While playing Zombie U you basically just use the controller to do everything, but every once in a while it'll ask you to look at your gamepad and tap something. Not as much work as pointing all the time in Metroid Prime 3 for the Wii. You can move the gamepad around(it has a gyroscope built in it) to look at particular things on the screen or just use the control sticks. In Nintendo Land(in the mini games I actually played), you mainly used the control sticks and buttons the whole time, the gamepad user just has a different controller and different role in the game(which is a cool way to change things up). Same thing with Injustice: use the buttons on the gamepad to fight, no motion gaming at all. You can just watch the game on your gamepad's screen or the tv. I'd recommend trying it out next time your at Wal-Mart or somewhere that has an open Wii U. I think the big change between the Wii and Wii U, is less pointing at the screen. Which is good to some people.