Brand new animal

Well, it's not always the company's fault, but your region/country's retailers also control the price of game discs/cartridges, so some other countries do have ridiculous prices for games, and high import costs.Graphics, and such do not matter to me, Zelda's still one of my favorite games, and I don't care how "grown-up" a game looks. Even so-called grown-up games have some childish content in them, while "childish" ones can still have some things for older fans to enjoy. So it's really unfair to judge games on how they look, but it's ok if Nintendo games aren't your cup of tea.Frankly, STEAM isn't for me, as there's hardly anything on it that interests me, and the games that do, I can just get on one of my console systems for the same price. I could never really get into PC gaming, as all my PCs are always cheap, (I'm not rich) and don't last long, or break down unexpectedly. Meanwhile, my oldest Nintendo system still works, so at least with those you don't have to worry about constantly upgrading, viruses, and such.Yes, I feel nostalgia, but that's not the only reason I like Nintendo. I like them, because their games are fun, graphics don't matter to me, (I'll take expressionism over realism any day. All those "good graphics" FPS & such games look all brown, and dull to me) I prefer their franchises, I like their controllers, (gaming with a keyboard/mouse is a pain for me) I like their characters, their stories, their quality, their tendency to do new things, ect.It's no strange thing people still like Nintendo, then how you like your Steam games. Everyone has their reasons, so it's unfair to just write everything as "nostalgia blind."And it's ok if you're not a huge gamer. I don't play games all the time either, I just enjoy what I like, same as you.So I guess we can wrap up this debate & discussion.I still like my 3DS too. :)Perhaps, we'll try to end it here. Sorry.