I hope Nintendo's not turning into EA, but this kind of stuff here is so much like something they would do. EA has been known for shutting down online play for older Madden games, for example. I just hope Nintendo's not following suit.
On the one hand, the Wii is 7 years old, and Nintendo wants to focus on its current systems - the 3DS and especially the Wii U, which hasn't been selling as well as they'd hoped. On the other hand, the Wii has been Nintendo's best-selling console, and I think it goes without saying that the majority of Nintendo's customers currently use the Wii. I think Nintendo is doing a
huge disservice to its largest share of customers by ending the Wii's online connectivity features, which were a major selling point for the Wii in the first place.
Basically, Nintendo is saying, despite the large number of people still using the Wii, that they're going to arbitrarily and artificially make the Wii obsolete, so that if people want online connectivity again, they're going to have to spend $300 for a Wii U. Yes, the Wii U will play all of the Wii's games (but not GameCube, which some versions of the Wii are backwards compatible with), but people don't want to spend $300 for an upgrade, especially those like me who only just recently bought a Wii. After all, the Wii is still sold right alongside the Wii U in most stores, and, obviously, many people prefer to spend less money for the Wii instead of the Wii U.
Nintendo has already started selling the Wii Mini in some markets (such as Canada and the UK), with a top-loading disc drive, no SD slot, and, most importantly, no internet connectivity whatsoever. (Ironically, it still has 48 slots on the Wii menu, which, without internet connectivity, will never get filled!)
What I want to know is... how many Wii users actually know about this change? It was announced on Nintendo's webpage, and then picked up by many other tech and gaming sites, but it has yet to be announced (if it will be at all) anywhere on the Wii - on the message board, Nintendo Channel, or anywhere else. I actually found out about it two days later only at random - I did a search for something with the word "channel" and Google gave me a link to Nintendo's announcement.