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How Microsoft and Sony almost killed the Wii before it launched

by rawmeatcowboy
14 November 2012
GN Version 4.0
Tom Quinn has been coined as 'the man that invented the Wii'. He's the guy that really got the ball rolling on motion control. His pairing with Nintendo paved the way to the Wii, but did you know he reached out to both Sony and Microsoft first? Believe it or not, both companies turned him down. Below, you can see Quinn recounting his interactions with both companies.

"I pitched this motion control device to him and he loved it. He set me up with the Xbox team in Redmond [Washington] for a second pitch and I remember how incredibly excited I was about it. Things were happening so fast.

But the meeting went terribly. The attitude I got from them was that if they wanted to do motion control, they would do it themselves and make a better job of it. I mean, they were just rude. In fact, the meeting went so terribly that one of the executives came over to me afterwards and apologised on behalf of others. I remember him saying how this was not how Microsoft should be engaging with potential partners."

"I'll never forget that meeting at Sony. We were in a tiny little room with a big PC projector and Kutaragi comes in, introduces himself, sits down and - I swear this is true - he closed his eyes the moment I started showing my pitch. He never opened them until I had finished.

It was awkward, very awkward, but I still asked him for feedback and he said, 'well, can you produce this for 50 cents?' I laughed and explained that would be impossible, so again I left empty handed and, to be honest, that time it got to me. I felt pretty let down. You have to remember that Sony and Microsoft were by far the two biggest console manufacturers. Nintendo wasn't doing well and we hadn't thought much about them."


This is a small part of the unbelievable story of how the Wii came to be. Check out the full feature here.