@Dalarrun Your lack of arguments and facts are pretty apparent. You use your opinions and the obvious is mobile gaming revenues covers more than 50% of the industry.
@princessbowsette it's only an insult if you find that term offensive. I never stated that the phone was trying to compete with the switch and you jumped right on my comment because it clearly offended you.
Anyways, y'all have fun. Business is business after all.
@Dalarrun again, all publicity is good publicity as long as they spell your name right. Not that many people in the western market know the name, now every Nintendo site is talking about it. Easy.
@Dalarrun @princessbowsette Y'all clearly don't read well since you are all clouded by your own judgement. I literally said this it was a marketing statement because it's not actually trying to compete with Nintendo. There's actually a fare amount of mobile games available that have masses of players. Huawei has sales of 50million last quarter, the switch sold 20 million. People use phones more than the switch. If you want numbers, look them up. Next time read someone's comment before you act like an unknowledgable brand loyalist. I said clearly that it was a marketing statement which clearly works since you're trying so hard to defend the switch.
While Huawei phones are actually very good, people here are too stuck in their own worlds of brand loyalty and denial. Lets be honest, the switches specs are nothing to brag about. There is a market for big phones, especially for actual professional grown ups, and they're honestly not even trying to compete with Nintendo. It's marketing that's actually working, getting their name and phone brand out there and actually making Nintendo fans twist in their seats because a Chinese phone company dared to challenge the switch.
Comments 6
Re: Soapbox: Huawei's Not The First Company To Vie For Nintendo's Portable Crown, And It Won't Be The Last
@Dalarrun Your lack of arguments and facts are pretty apparent. You use your opinions and the obvious is mobile gaming revenues covers more than 50% of the industry.
@princessbowsette it's only an insult if you find that term offensive. I never stated that the phone was trying to compete with the switch and you jumped right on my comment because it clearly offended you.
Anyways, y'all have fun. Business is business after all.
Re: Soapbox: Huawei's Not The First Company To Vie For Nintendo's Portable Crown, And It Won't Be The Last
@Dalarrun again, all publicity is good publicity as long as they spell your name right. Not that many people in the western market know the name, now every Nintendo site is talking about it. Easy.
Re: Soapbox: Huawei's Not The First Company To Vie For Nintendo's Portable Crown, And It Won't Be The Last
@PrincessBowsette Any publicity is good publicity, try thinking outside the box instead thinking from your fanboy mindset.
Re: Soapbox: Huawei's Not The First Company To Vie For Nintendo's Portable Crown, And It Won't Be The Last
@Dalarrun Had to point the obvious out to you since you obviously couldn't read clearly and obviously didn't get a simple marketing stunt.
Re: Soapbox: Huawei's Not The First Company To Vie For Nintendo's Portable Crown, And It Won't Be The Last
@Dalarrun @princessbowsette Y'all clearly don't read well since you are all clouded by your own judgement. I literally said this it was a marketing statement because it's not actually trying to compete with Nintendo. There's actually a fare amount of mobile games available that have masses of players. Huawei has sales of 50million last quarter, the switch sold 20 million. People use phones more than the switch. If you want numbers, look them up. Next time read someone's comment before you act like an unknowledgable brand loyalist. I said clearly that it was a marketing statement which clearly works since you're trying so hard to defend the switch.
Re: Soapbox: Huawei's Not The First Company To Vie For Nintendo's Portable Crown, And It Won't Be The Last
While Huawei phones are actually very good, people here are too stuck in their own worlds of brand loyalty and denial. Lets be honest, the switches specs are nothing to brag about. There is a market for big phones, especially for actual professional grown ups, and they're honestly not even trying to compete with Nintendo. It's marketing that's actually working, getting their name and phone brand out there and actually making Nintendo fans twist in their seats because a Chinese phone company dared to challenge the switch.