While I agree that the controllers are somewhat Wii-inspired, I'm not sure it proves Nintendo "got it right." The bottom line is that the Wii sold most of its units when it was priced way below the competition. A lot of games for Wii sell very well and do not use motion control hardly at all.
In my opinion the Wiimote *is* a gimmick, if an occasionally fun gimmick. But the primary success of the Wii was the incremental upgrade to their previous generation, allowing a much cheaper cost of development, and thus cost to the end user (even though that cost was quite inflated). A lot of the uses of the Wiimote in games feel tacked on (Mario party) and can often be more cumbersome than an alternative controller.
The brilliance of the Wiimote may actually be simplistic it is. It goes back to as few buttons as an NES, making it easier for video gaming neophytes to approach. But for people who have been gaming for years, it's quite annoying when you only have one crappy joystick vs. two fully directional ones. Hence the market divide.
I don't think Sony's solution will attract too many customers. Wii customers and PS3 customers are just different markets. Why would you buy a PS3 to play a few motion games when there are so many already out for Wii (and Wii costs less)? On the other hand it allows them to sell peripherals and PS3 owners can now take advantage of the (few, IMO) cases where a motion controller actually improves the experience.
In my opinion the Wiimote *is* a gimmick, if an occasionally fun gimmick. But the primary success of the Wii was the incremental upgrade to their previous generation, allowing a much cheaper cost of development, and thus cost to the end user (even though that cost was quite inflated). A lot of the uses of the Wiimote in games feel tacked on (Mario party) and can often be more cumbersome than an alternative controller.
The brilliance of the Wiimote may actually be simplistic it is. It goes back to as few buttons as an NES, making it easier for video gaming neophytes to approach. But for people who have been gaming for years, it's quite annoying when you only have one crappy joystick vs. two fully directional ones. Hence the market divide.
I don't think Sony's solution will attract too many customers. Wii customers and PS3 customers are just different markets. Why would you buy a PS3 to play a few motion games when there are so many already out for Wii (and Wii costs less)? On the other hand it allows them to sell peripherals and PS3 owners can now take advantage of the (few, IMO) cases where a motion controller actually improves the experience.