Skip to main content

Hey Nintendo, it’s time to get on board with mobile gaming

Mario smartphoneDon’t expect to see Mario jumping down pipes on an iPhone or Android phone anytime soon–or possibly ever. Nintendo CEO Satoru Iwata has made it clear that the gaming company will create software for its products and its products alone. Such extreme loyalty isn’t entirely based on self-promotion either: Nintendo thinks that mobile gaming (as in games for smartphones and tablets, not to be confused with portable gaming in the form of the Nintendo 3DS and Sony’s PSP) is bad for the market in general. Earlier this year, Nintendo executive Reginald Fils-Aime put in plainly, saying “I actually think that one of the biggest risks today in our gaming industry are these inexpensive games that are disposable from a consumer standpoint.”

Unfortunately for Nintendo, those consumers don’t agree. Mobile games have taken over and are the biggest threat to industry veterans. But what these veterans are doing is jumping on board, as quickly as possible. Microsoft has its own mobile operating system that integrates with Xbox Live, and Sony has the Android-based PlayStation Xperia Play on its roster. Nintendo, however, remains a holdout.

And investors are less than pleased with this stance, which honestly makes Nintendo look a little like the dinosaur of the gaming world. According to Bloomberg, they want Iwata to abandon Nintendo’s sole-platform agenda and look into the very profitable world of iPad, iPhone, and Facebook game development.

Nintendo’s stock has plummeted recently, thanks in part to its ignorance of mobile gaming’s growth as well as its competitors’ focus on this platform. The compromises Nintendo tried to make were the 3DS and the forthcoming WiiU. The 3DS has performed below expectations, and the WiiU has received a hefty amount of criticism already. Going it your own way and struggling only works for so long, and it seems Nintendo’s only real option for guaranteed success is to cooperate with outside platforms.

Last month, rumors began circulating that Nintendo was interested in development for mobile operating systems. The short-lived gossip caused Nintendo shares to spike, but when the company said it had no such plans, they fell again. Are Nintendo execs not seeing a pattern? As one investment firm bluntly put it, “They just don’t get it. Sell the stock, because a management once feted for creative out-of-box thinking have just shown how behind the times they are.”

Hopefully investor pressure will be enough to turn around what’s quickly beginning to look like a sinking ship. We feel pretty confident saying that Mario Bros. mobile games could easily top app stores. The move would open up Nintendo’s games to what’s partially a new audience: There are plenty of consumers who have taken to smartphones that never touched a gaming console but can’t get enough of Angry Birds. Come on, Nintendo. Give the people what they want. It’s time. 

Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
It’s late 2022, and Verizon and AT&T still can’t beat T-Mobile’s 5G network
The T-Mobile logo on a smartphone.

It’s been 10 months since Verizon and AT&T flipped the switch on their new C-band 5G spectrum, but it appears both carriers still have their work cut out for them if they want to catch up to T-Mobile.

Market analyses and independent tests have agreed for years that T-Mobile is the fastest and most reliable 5G carrier in the U.S. That’s not surprising as it had a massive advantage by holding licenses for the crucial midrange spectrum that provides the best balance between range and speed. While Verizon’s early high-frequency mmWave rollouts allowed it to boast raw speeds that were significantly faster, those were confined to about 1% of its subscriber base.

Read more
The iPhone 14 Pro could be a gaming beast, but something is holding it back
Playing Call of Duty Mobile on iPhone 14 Pro

For the better part of the past ten years, Apple’s in-house A-series processors powering iPhones and iPads have had a definitive edge over rivals from Qualcomm, Samsung, and MediaTek. With the iPhone 14 series hitting the shelves in 2022, the performance gulf has only widened this year.

It’s somewhat astonishing to see just how powerful these ‘smartphone chips’ are. The entire transition away from the x86-based Intel ecosystem to self-designed M-series processors for Macs happened on the foundations of a developer kit powered by the A12Z chip, a processor fitted inside the 2020 iPad Pro.

Read more
Nintendo’s Wii Shop Channel and DSi shops are back online
Nintendo 3DS close-up.

After months of service outages, Nintendo's Wii Shop Channel and DSi Shop are back online.

Nintendo's two virtual marketplace services went down in March of this year. In a statement to Kotaku on the outage, Nintendo acknowledged the downtime but had nothing to report other than that the shops were undergoing maintenance and that it would provide updates on them at a later date. It seems it completely skipped the update and simply put both back online instead.

Read more