I just feel that things like motion control and 3D are gimmicks that have no long lasting or inherent value to gaming
That's completely understandable
And sorry for calling you out earlier, I was just hoping the thread wouldn't devolve into you posting that after everything
Anyways, you're right. For a lot of people motion control is very gimmicky. Look at how Wii sales have plummeted recently. What Sony and MS are probably trying to do is keep that new audience that the Wii brought, and selling them on better graphics, control, online, and multimedia functions.. all while trying to maintain their current fanbases which doesn't generally want that.
It's late in the console cycle and it's a gamble they're all taking hoping to keep things going a little longer before having to bring out the next generation of systems.
That having been said, bringing them out this late in the cycle isn't a smart thing generally. Consumers won't have an issue paying the price, but developers would.
Game budgets already barely break even, in some cases as loss leaders as they learn the tech (PS3) or set up DLC.
Now, programmers have to learn something new all over again which delays development which means they spend more without having anything to show for it. This is why a lot of early stuff is shovelware.
Of course, if half the fanbase buys a Move/Kinect, that divides the sales potential of titles for those who don't have a motion controller.
Which again, is why there's a lot of shovelware and testing out of the tech on both sides (player and designer)
The potential problem is if Sony and MS are using this to test how to approach the next generation. If it succeeds, then they get more time to develop and maybe some better games when it becomes standard on next cycle. If they don't succeed, there's a lot of time lost developing games no one plays.
On one hand, MS is playing it safe by doing Kinect in case it bombs, as hard core games are still being developed simultaneously. Sony's Move seems to be getting a little more push, so they have more to lose if theirs bombs.
Either way, it's a pivotal moment that's going to likely decide how next gen launches. After MS got an early lead last gen, everyone's going to be chomping at the bit to move ahead. All Wii has to do is slap HD graphics on their system, but with sales tanking, they may skip that thinking. If motion takes off for MS and Sony, then we're one step closer to next gen which will likely launch with motion as the standard.
Either way, the technology needs to advance further, and to their credit Sony and MS have done that with their respective motion controllers. If you don't like it, and again, that's fine, take solace in the fact that it's in its infancy, and the jump from Wii to Move/Kinect will likely undergo a similar leap if it moves forward as the new standard.