@lstormy10, I don't think PS3 software sales are particularly strong, either. But people are buying PS3 because of other reasons than gaming. That's not part of this discussion, though.
You're using cyclical logic to "prove" that my thinking that the ratio of PS3:Wii doesn't matter, so it can't be a valid argument. Maybe I misunderstood, but it seems like your argument is "the ratio doesn't affect tie-ins, so it doesn't affect tie-ins". That doesn't work. My point is this: it doesn't matter how many consoles are sold if the games don't sell. And it doesn't seem like the games are selling, on a broad basis, for the Wii.
We could argue back and forth about this, and not sway each other's opinions. I'm more interested in the meaning of the statistics, not the statistics themselves. And I'll say again: a system that doesn't sell a ton of games and has nothing else to offer but gaming isn't going to be a lasting power.
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I don't think PS3 software sales are particularly strong, either. But people are buying PS3 because of other reasons than gaming. That's not part of this discussion, though.
You're using cyclical logic to "prove" that my thinking that the ratio of PS3:Wii doesn't matter, so it can't be a valid argument. Maybe I misunderstood, but it seems like your argument is "the ratio doesn't affect tie-ins, so it doesn't affect tie-ins". That doesn't work. My point is this: it doesn't matter how many consoles are sold if the games don't sell. And it doesn't seem like the games are selling, on a broad basis, for the Wii.
We could argue back and forth about this, and not sway each other's opinions. I'm more interested in the meaning of the statistics, not the statistics themselves. And I'll say again: a system that doesn't sell a ton of games and has nothing else to offer but gaming isn't going to be a lasting power.