Nintendo’s big plan for the future isn’t mobile games — it’s boosting your “quality of life.” At a briefing for investors and the media held on Thursday morning, Nintendo’s CEO Satoru Iwata outlined the company’s plan to create a third platform to sit alongside its Wii U and Nintendo 3DS game machines.
“What Nintendo will try to achieve in the next 10 years is a platform business that improves people’s [quality of life] in enjoyable ways,” Iwata said.
It’ll run software in the vein of Wii Fit and Brain Age, the self-help applications that were such a big hit for Nintendo on its Wii and DS platforms. Nintendo sold over 40 million copies of the Wii Fit games and over 33 million copies of the Brain Age games.
But, said Iwata, the aim is to create a platform that’s not a videogame machine first and foremost, but one that’s entirely focused around these “quality of life” apps. Thus, he hopes to sail the company into another “blue ocean” — an untapped market of consumers who’d never buy a videogame console, but who would buy a product focused around health instead of hijinks.
Nintendo said it plans to discuss the specific details of what it’s calling the QOL platform this year, with an eye towards releasing it during the fiscal year that begins in April 2015 and ends in March 2016. It’s a “non-wearable” device, Iwata said, but declined to give any more details on what that meant.
“As those who are already suffering from illness can seek medical care, our new business domain would… enable people to monitor their health,” Iwata said. “However, what is generally good for health requires some kind of effort to be made by the individual, and… it is sometimes difficult to stay focused and engaged, and it is not uncommon to give up after a few days.”
“This is where our strength as an entertainment company to keep our consumers engaged and entertained comes into play,” he said.
While Iwata said the QOL platform’s initial focus would be on “Health”-related software as represented by games like Wii Fit and Brain Age, it would later move into other areas like “Education” (music, painting, foreign language learning) or “Lifestyle” (cooking, etc).
Although Iwata did stress that the new platform would be a separate business unit within Nintendo, he also said that Nintendo wants to bring all of these users together. Nintendo recently connected its Nintendo 3DS and Wii U user bases under a single Nintendo Network account that straddles both platforms, so it’s most likely that the new platform would use the same login, thus bringing all of Nintendo’s customers together under a single online identity.