It was only a matter of time.
- Nintendo releases an innovative console with motion-sensing controllers
- console sales quickly reach more than 400,000 in Japan, 600,000 in the US, continually selling-out shortly after stores open, successfully establishing success
- a few people online claim stories of controller straps breaking, flying remotes, and broken items on impact
- web-sites appear devoted to humorously highlighting Wii player mishaps, capitalizing on buzz, hoping to catch visitors and ad revenue
- “news” stories report on hyped incidents, increasing popular media coverage
- Nintendo reminds Wii owners of the safety precautions they provide with each console, game, and controller to protect themselves from lawsuit-happy idiots
- consumers declare the devices unsafe and defective, demand reparations
- Nintendo considerately responds to public concern, offers free strap replacement in retail stores and online
- class action by idiots ensues
- class action stirs Nintendo defenders at kotaku and slashdot
There’s nothing particularly surprising in this series of events. As a happy owner of a Wii and four remotes, I can only identify a few reasons you might have explaining why you can’t be trusted with this toy.
- You deem the wrist-strap too uncool for your Wii Sports: Bowling stance, and skip it before hurling the ball down the lane. But your hands are covered in Dorito-grease, and you’ve been drinking (like you do), and you release that ball with just the right about of spin, curving it in for a strike. But it’s still not a bowling ball, and you’re still in your dorm-room, now quiet with a remote through your TV.
- Wii Sports: Golf so realistically replicates your golf course experience, you can’t help continuing your bad habits in front of the video-game. Like slightly twisting left on your swing. Or consistently over-shooting the green. Or chipping into the water-hazard and throwing your club after it. But that wasn’t your club.
- I got nuthin’ else … Just don’t let go of the damn controller, and don’t make up stupid excuses if you do without wearing that strap.
2 thoughts on “A Wii Legal Concern”