
The Tyuno Project: "April is here, which means that new games are coming our way. One game that I was looking forward to was the remake of the awesome JRPG known as Xenoblade Chronicles. When I first heard about this game coming for the 3DS, honestly I wasn’t to excited for it then. Now that I’ve seen different videos and let’s plays on YouTube, I started to gain interested. So decide to go to my local Gamestop and pre-order this game because I wanted to try it out. But then I didn’t some research and I found out that this game is only playable for the New Nintendo 3DS hardware. And you know what, that is completely BS and here’s why."

Alex S. from Link Cable Gaming writes: "I want to take yet another opportunity to talk about why I love Xenoblade so much. And this time, I’m focusing on the original protagonist. Here’s why I think Shulk is one of Nintendo’s best characters."

Half-Glass Gaming: "Production of the 3DS has been discontinued as of September of 2020, but there’s definitely an argument to be made for adopting the system in 2021, especially if you just really like playing awesome video games."

Xenoblade is Better Than Final Fantasy - While Final Fantasy has a storied history, Xenoblade, as a franchise, has surpased it in in quality over the years.
Xenoblade 1 and xenoblade 2 had better quality than ff13 and its sequels as well as ff15. Lol. Such rubbish. Xenoblade 2 especially is utter rubbish with bad graphics and performance issues
Not the classics though. In this and the previous generation, yes unless ff7r is a great game.
Xenoblade 2 is not even on the same level of FF 12. LOL nice try tho.
This is Nintendo's new way of making people buy more hardware. Come out with a new one every three years and force people to upgrade by locking new games to just the new hardware.
I definitely appreciate the sentiment made on this piece -- it does suck that every 3DS owner can't play Xenoblade.
However, the main argument behind it is technically based around factually incorrect information:
"Now I know why Nintendo decided to do this and that was to promote the Nintendo Amiibo feature"
This is not entirely true, it was because they needed the extra CPU power for an open world, and an open world requires more power for draw calls.
Even if you were to take away Amiibo support, the old 3DS wouldn't be powerful enough to run Xenoblade, period.
Furthermore, the Shulk Amiibo is sold in such low numbers that Nintendo has no actual incentive to spend heaps of money developing a game to sell a few more toys.
I don't mean to ramble, but do take a look at this developer interview for more information about the developer's struggles to get Xenoblade up and running on the New 3DS, let alone the old 3DS:
http://www.nintendolife.com...
This was the case from the start, it was announced as a New 3DS game only.