05-05-2014, 06:28 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-05-2014, 06:33 PM by Sevenstitch.)
It's unfortunate, but It's also sound (if not shady) business economics
A baseline WiiU is designed to be a lesser version of a "proper" WiiU
Companies are completely aware they are selling you a potentially nerfed version of their product, thats the whole point
The whole purpose of selling economy models of consoles is to force you to eventually upgrade to a more expensive version
The aim is that not only will they receive an initial purchase from a consumer, but by purchasing a lesser model, that customer will
inevitably have to "upgrade" and purchase an entirely new console, resulting in a higher amount of units sold, ergo more profits
Shame that this is how it works, but this is how it works
Sorry guy, it's a shame, I feel for ya
EDIT: Also, if you have the largest model available, and still have this problem, then this just points to negligence by Nintendo in general,
which really at this point is par for the course
A baseline WiiU is designed to be a lesser version of a "proper" WiiU
Companies are completely aware they are selling you a potentially nerfed version of their product, thats the whole point
The whole purpose of selling economy models of consoles is to force you to eventually upgrade to a more expensive version
The aim is that not only will they receive an initial purchase from a consumer, but by purchasing a lesser model, that customer will
inevitably have to "upgrade" and purchase an entirely new console, resulting in a higher amount of units sold, ergo more profits
Shame that this is how it works, but this is how it works
Sorry guy, it's a shame, I feel for ya
EDIT: Also, if you have the largest model available, and still have this problem, then this just points to negligence by Nintendo in general,
which really at this point is par for the course