At this point, Nintendo contacted a third-party company known as Gyration to further develop the technology. Gyration had initially proposed their motion technology to Nintendo independently, and Nintendo was interested while Sony and Microsoft were not. As such, Gyration and Nintendo heavily collaborated on creating a variety of motion controller prototypes, with the original goal of being able to roughly preserve the GameCube's button layout. Gyration ultimately pitched the "GyroPod" concept to Nintendo, a break-away controller somewhat similar to the Nintendo Switch JoyCons. This concept was pitched in around 2003, and was ultimately developed into the Wii Remote as the new controller and new console projects merged. | At this point, Nintendo contacted a third-party company known as Gyration to further develop the technology. Gyration had initially proposed their motion technology to Nintendo independently, and Nintendo was interested while Sony and Microsoft were not. As such, Gyration and Nintendo heavily collaborated on creating a variety of motion controller prototypes, with the original goal of being able to roughly preserve the GameCube's button layout. Gyration ultimately pitched the "GyroPod" concept to Nintendo, a break-away controller somewhat similar to the Nintendo Switch JoyCons. This concept was pitched in around 2003, and was ultimately developed into the Wii Remote as the new controller and new console projects merged. |