Gede: I too thought the name was silly too. However, after a while I think I got used to it. I don't know if I ever tried it.
A friend of mine said she had the greatest fun playing Wii Sports with some friends, and she was no gamer. So I suppose it did well with its target audience. The U is something I haven't understood yet. I think I can see a good idea in there (second screen for asymmetric or hidden information multiplayer games, or simply for extra information). But... I don't know... I hardly tried it.
I do like that there is a company aiming for a market outside of hard core gamers.By the way, what happened to that Ouya console? Are there any players left in that market?
Ah, the Ouya. What a grandiose failure. At the end of the day, the Ouya was still an underpowered Android console trying to cater to indies, that by the time it actually came out, Microsoft, Sony, Nintendo, and the PC had already casually stepped up and taken their shares of the market; rendering the Ouya obsolete during development. Also around the same time, the Raspberry Pi came along and took even more wind out of the Ouya's sales, being cheaper, far more versatile, and less prone to overheating. Oh, and then along came the Chromecast to do any remaining functions of the Ouya, only officially licensed and supported by Google.
To add insult to injury, there were no user side developer tools, so if your Ouya bricked or you wanted to make it Stock Android, well too bad for you then.
Since then, the Ouya has been sold to Razr who probably will bat it around for a while before liquidating the project.
Oh, and it never got an update, so it's still stuck on Android 4.1, rather than having been upgraded to say, KitKat after hitting store shelves or something.