I agree with all that (except the Sega bit . . . if this was ever true, it certainly hasn't been for a LONG time
). Nintendo is the greatest software developer/publisher on the planet. The DS is the only Nintendo system I haven't owned (I think it's really cool, but I have no place in my life for portable games these days). Honestly, that's really where all this hating on the Nintendo Wii stems from. If I wasn't so emotionally invested in Nintendo, it would be a non-issue. I'd just get a different system and have done with it. It's my desire for Nintendo to succeed, and for the Wii to succeed -- my desire to love the Wii -- that makes me so disappointed in the really stupid hardware mistakes that I think Nintendo made.
Well okay, Sega's been dropping the ball on Sonic titles (and you know what... slightly overrated series overall anyway - not bad, just not as good as they were made out to be). But when it comes to video games that actually seem to have a "personality", Sega does quite well. (I'll go ahead and give credit to Capcom and Konami as well but they have always been 3rd party so I'm not counting them)
And maybe I'm having no frustrations with the Wii because I'm considerably simplified my gaming needs. Not on purpose, of course. But as my leisure time has dwindled at the same time my available choice of alternate recreational hobbies increased, I find that I'm less willing to invest time in these gritty "interactive narratives" that dot the more powerful systems' landscape. And for every must-own game on the PS3 or 360, there are a few dozen that look as if they're not trying very hard to bring anything new to the table.
The Wii, on the other hand, simplified everything to the point where you can just bring home the console, hook it up and begin playing right out of the box. Most games are pick-up-and-play without those annoying "mandatory tutorials" or "three hour introduction" (except for SM Galaxy, one of its few flaws). If I get bored with my software, I can either pop online and download some classics (or the new games being developed for WiiWare) or pop in some cheap-but-excellent Gamecube titles. Yeah, perhaps they could have beefed up the Wii a little, but it works for what it is.
Here's the twist though: If the 360 gives me a compelling enough reason to drop cash on their machine, I'd pick one up in a heartbeat. I love Nintendo, but I've always played the console field too. The only problem is, nowadays, not even the promise of GTA4 is enough to make me blink (it's a great game series, but the formula is not as fresh as it was back when the GTA3 arrived). Yeah, there are some 360 exclusives I'd snatch up if I could. But , for now, the Wii is more than enough to keep me entertained.