Like Nintendo's previous
mobile release Miitomo, the games will be available on both Android and iOS mobile platforms.
Like Nintendo's previous
mobile release Miitomo, the games will be available on both Android and iOS mobile platforms.
Not exact matches
With
Miitomo out and celebrating 10 million users, it was the first of five
mobile games (even though
Miitomo is more of an app than a game,) that was meant to be
released by March 2016, which clearly never happened but it seems two of the remaining four are to be aFire Emblem and Animal Crossing title, which are expected for
release, sometime during the Fall.
It recently
released its first ever
mobile app called
Miitomo.
With the recent announcement of the upcoming Animal Crossing
mobile game using the free - to - play model (or free - to - start in Nintendo - speak), we thought we'd take a deep dive into the monetization of Nintendo's previously
released Miitomo app to see what we can expect.
Part of Nintendo's press
release today also included some
mobile news in the form of games instead of app - like experiences that we've seen so far in
Miitomo.
Once they know Nintendo's
releasing mobile games (not just
Miitomo, which was just meant to get people to make Nintendo Accounts)- they'll keep an eye out for more Nintendo - brand games.
Super Mario Run represents the next phase of Nintendo's expansion to
mobile platforms, following the
release of
Miitomo earlier this year.
So, it's nice that you still hold hope that Nintendo hasn't completely transformed into a soulless money - hungry company, but before SMR, FEH, and AC / PC (as well as perhaps
Miitomo, which I totally forgot about), gamers had believed that Nintendo would
release Nintendo - quality games on
mobile devices.
For years Nintendo resisted bringing its intellectual property to
mobile phones, but in 2015, a deal with Chinese
mobile gaming specialist DeNa reversed that, leading to the successful
releases Miitomo and Super Mario Run.
Note that Pokémon Go, like Nintendo's two other recent
mobile game
releases (Pokémon Shuffle and
Miitomo), is being
released under the free - to - play business model, so it may be inferred that Nintendo no longer considers inexpensive games to be a risk to the industry.
With the recent announcement of the upcoming Animal Crossing
mobile game using the free - to - play model (or free - to - start in Nintendo - speak), we thought we'd take a deep dive into the monetization of Nintendo's previously
released Miitomo app to see what we can expect.