Friday night played host to my Wii party in the aptly-named "party room" off the apartment lobby. It was a nice upgrade from my 27" TV to the 60" unit there. When all was said and done, there were probably a dozen or so people (only a handful of which had any sort of gaming experience under their belt) who had a chance to try it out over the course of a few hours.
As anyone would expect, we started off with a healthy dose of Wii Sports. Bowling was by far the most well-received. Tennis was also a good one. Golf, while enjoyed by those who played, isn't the most spectator friendly, so that wasn't played much. Everyone picked it up after a few minutes and was able to be fairly competitive.
Rayman was popped in just to showcase the bunny hunt (it would have been a lot more enjoyable, but that
ing door-closing mini-game is impossible, so I haven't unlocked shit yet) and one of the rythym games.
Red Steel was showcased near the end to satisfy one of the few "hardcore" gamers in the crowd. Unexpectedly, I destroyed anyone I matched up against, and the target person didn't enjoy it too much as he "hates console FPS," but surprisingly, even a few of the girls who had never touched an FPS on any platform were able to pick up the controls after a few short minutes. I wouldn't go anywhere near saying they were good, but they had a grasp on the essentials.
Outside of the party, Madden was the real winner. One of my old roommates and my fiancee's brother played it for about 3 hours until 1am. Controls were pretty easy to pick up after running through a few quick series. The roommate enjoyed this version much better than the PC version that he's played a bit. My fiancee's brother never liked any of the Madden games he had played (PS2 or Xbox), but he played near 10 hours of this one over the weekend - he crashed on the couch Thursday and Friday night).
All in all, Nintendo has a real winner on their hands. Wii Sports is the perfect game to include in the system, though a second controller set would really make it the perfect out-of-the-box solution. Once Wii Sports gets old or loses the draw for an everyday play, if they can keep up with solid software support, there won't be any reason for the Wii to be a "failure" in any sense of the word.
I just wish Nintendo started handing out commissions to early adopters. I guaranteed them at least three console sales, maybe more. One to a big techie nut who was pretty much planning on getting one anyway after the first price drop; one to a newlywed couple who play WoW religiously (but that's the only game she has ever played); and one to my fiancee's brother once he gets a job and saves up for one.
As anyone would expect, we started off with a healthy dose of Wii Sports. Bowling was by far the most well-received. Tennis was also a good one. Golf, while enjoyed by those who played, isn't the most spectator friendly, so that wasn't played much. Everyone picked it up after a few minutes and was able to be fairly competitive.
Rayman was popped in just to showcase the bunny hunt (it would have been a lot more enjoyable, but that

Red Steel was showcased near the end to satisfy one of the few "hardcore" gamers in the crowd. Unexpectedly, I destroyed anyone I matched up against, and the target person didn't enjoy it too much as he "hates console FPS," but surprisingly, even a few of the girls who had never touched an FPS on any platform were able to pick up the controls after a few short minutes. I wouldn't go anywhere near saying they were good, but they had a grasp on the essentials.
Outside of the party, Madden was the real winner. One of my old roommates and my fiancee's brother played it for about 3 hours until 1am. Controls were pretty easy to pick up after running through a few quick series. The roommate enjoyed this version much better than the PC version that he's played a bit. My fiancee's brother never liked any of the Madden games he had played (PS2 or Xbox), but he played near 10 hours of this one over the weekend - he crashed on the couch Thursday and Friday night).
All in all, Nintendo has a real winner on their hands. Wii Sports is the perfect game to include in the system, though a second controller set would really make it the perfect out-of-the-box solution. Once Wii Sports gets old or loses the draw for an everyday play, if they can keep up with solid software support, there won't be any reason for the Wii to be a "failure" in any sense of the word.
I just wish Nintendo started handing out commissions to early adopters. I guaranteed them at least three console sales, maybe more. One to a big techie nut who was pretty much planning on getting one anyway after the first price drop; one to a newlywed couple who play WoW religiously (but that's the only game she has ever played); and one to my fiancee's brother once he gets a job and saves up for one.