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02 May 2006 17:00 | Dusty | Wii Xbox360News.com | Link to this article
We have already read over a million opinions in various internet forums, but what do the game developers think about the name "Wii"? Game development site Gamasutra decided to find out. Respondents included CEO Alex Seropian of Wideload Games (Stubbs The Zombie), High Moon Studios' Meelad Sadat (Darkwatch), and longtime Gamasutra columnist Ernest Adams, among others. Even though Wii meets many of the criteria Nintendo should be going for, it fails at the criteria "don't pick a silly, awful-sounding name." Luckily, Nintendo's disruptive business strategy and high quality games will be more than enough to make up for a crazy name. I think Nintendo will do just fine this next round, and I'm very interested in supporting them as a game developer. Last note: if only it were called the GameSphere, and had been designed as a totally impractical spherical console that would roll right off your entertainment center. I would have liked that a Wii bit more than Wii. - David Sirlin, designer, Backbone Entertainment. _____________________________________________________ (Of course, it also sounds like the French word for "yes," "oui" -- but how big is the French Nintendo market?) It doesn't change my personal opinions of the console in the slightest. It changes my opinion of the Nintendo marketing department considerably. Did they even bother to research this? Why do they do these things? What was wrong with "Revolution"? It's bad enough that the Japanese have a drink called "Sweat," but at least they don't try to export it to the English-speaking world with that name. Am I supposed to be happy about having to go down to the game store to purchase the "Nintendo Wee"? For God's sake, where was Miyamoto? I can't believe he would have let this get by. - Ernest Adams, game design lecturer and columnist. _____________________________________________________ That all said, I personally really liked the name Revolution. - Chris Charla, senior producer, Backbone Entertainment.
-Alex Seropian, CEO, Wideload Games. _____________________________________________________ Revolution was a good strong name. Wii is... silly. Years ago, I had a friend who worked in the banking industry in New York, and had joke names for just about every bank then in the city (e.g. Citibank = Shittybank, Chemical = Comical). Perhaps we need to embark on this for our industry. Electronic Arts, whose first ads promoted actual game designers as artists engaging the artistic frontier in electronic media, might perhaps better be known today as Electronic Serfs, for their treatment of their employees. Activision might be better known as Passivision given their roll-over passivity in the face of the trend toward franchise and licensed titles. Given Nintendo's hubristic but unintended failure to maintain its control over the console market, perhaps Nonintendo would do. THQ's habit of quickly producing shovelware might make PDQ a better name. Atari can be dealt with by insisting on calling it Infogrames, which is funny enough in its own right. - Greg Costikyan, co-founder, Manifesto Games. _____________________________________________________ Did Wii arise out of a collection of names? Did they roundtable and focus test it? Did the innermost core of the company retreat to the woods, ingest psilocybin mushrooms and carve it into a tree? I don't know. Will it affect the success of the box? In my opinion likely not at all, and certainly not significantly. -Meelad Sadat, director of business relations, High Moon Studios
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