"...for the time being you may continue to re-download content you have purchased or transfer that content from a Wii system to a Wii U system. Be aware that these features will eventually end at a future date."
It happened recently so there is a grace period to download final copies of a game, but if your console dies and you want to transfer games to another unit you get off eBay in a few years, you are SOL.
> if your console dies and you want to transfer games to another unit you get off eBay in a few years, you are SOL.
Again, this is not functionally different than your cartridge dying. If your NES cartridge dies, you can replace it with a second-hand copy, or you're SOL. The same.
You're saying that there's a consumer benefit to a console-cartridge system being modular (such that either module can be replaced when desired, rather than needing to replace them as a package), but I don't think this has any bearing on ownership rights, nor any of the other points that you claimed. At least, not in the case of the Wii Shop.
Large game collections are of much more value than a console, and consoles are more complex and have a much higher failure rate. Particularly if it is a console vs a simple media like a Wii game optical disc that is well taken care of.
Maybe I had 100 $40 games on my $100 console. Console breaks, I lose all games.
With physical media: One game breaks, I lose one game. One console breaks, I lose one console. Way less risk.
Also I can't sell or transfer the digital copies to friends or family.
Lock-in digitals are not at all equivalent rights of physical copies.
For cartridge roms and pressed CDs the failure rate is much, much lower than the console and the expected life span much longer. Not to mention it's often possible to back those mediums up and play the backups or original media on another console.
For carts this is (mostly[1]) true but honestly I'd be pretty surprised if the average CD outlasts a console that used mostly flash to store the games on. Sure if the flash has had consistent write cycles for years it might fail eventually but probably people will be finding games intact on wiis for a long time yet.
A lot of video game CDs barely lasted the life of their console without becoming basically useless.
[1] There are mask roms that are prone to failure, and some NES for eg. games are vulnerable to progressive failure of their battery backed RAM chips, which were not just for save backup but were also often used as extra RAM with a lot of write cycles (and to be clear, I don't mean the battery dying - I mean stuck or flipped bits on the ram itself).
The difference between the time it takes physical copies to wear out is much much longer than the time it takes $company to decide that it's time to force everyone to buy the next latest-and-greatest.
I've got NES cartridges from the 80s or 90s still working.
> I've got NES cartridges from the 80s or 90s still working.
And I've got Switch cartridges that are dependent on Nintendo's continued online support.
My point was that a physical Wii still works and is still a physical object, so it serves the same functional purpose here as individual NES cartridges.
Not really.
You can still play games purchased at the Wii Shop, you just can't re-download them.
[Edited to note: Apparently you can re-download or transfer to a Wii U]
That's not meaningfully different from having one physical copy: you can use the physical copy until the point that it's worn out.