This is all about the internets at the moment surrounding the GDC Indie Game The Movie Screening Q&A , Phil (FEZ) Fish was the man behind the headline quote.
This is what was originally reported.
"The Japanese developer praised the movie and said he was pleased to see how many independent developers had been inspired by games such as Super Mario Bros and Zelda since their childhood."
"But when he asked what the panel thought of modern Japanese video games, Phil Fish (pictured) immediately replied “your games just suck” – a comment that sparked an audible reaction from the crowd, though some were cheering."
Now at GDC there was also a talk called 'The Future of Japanese Games', in which Keiji Inafune said about Japan's influence on gaming “They are now just great, great memories,”

Keiji Inafune quotes from the GDC talk The Future of Japanese Games.
“Perhaps the folks who are now running the show in the Japanese games industry are those who simply jumped on a bandwagon. The creations that measured up to global standards were crafted by our predecessors.”
So two differing ways of expressing the same opinion but what do you think? (about the core message not the different ways of expression)
Does Japanese development hang onto too much pride to stand up and say lets change, lets create?
Can the industry survive developing it's own games/genre/brands and selling solely to its own market?
Do (some) Japanese game now JUST SUCK?
This is what was originally reported.
"The Japanese developer praised the movie and said he was pleased to see how many independent developers had been inspired by games such as Super Mario Bros and Zelda since their childhood."
"But when he asked what the panel thought of modern Japanese video games, Phil Fish (pictured) immediately replied “your games just suck” – a comment that sparked an audible reaction from the crowd, though some were cheering."
Now at GDC there was also a talk called 'The Future of Japanese Games', in which Keiji Inafune said about Japan's influence on gaming “They are now just great, great memories,”

Keiji Inafune quotes from the GDC talk The Future of Japanese Games.
“Perhaps the folks who are now running the show in the Japanese games industry are those who simply jumped on a bandwagon. The creations that measured up to global standards were crafted by our predecessors.”
So two differing ways of expressing the same opinion but what do you think? (about the core message not the different ways of expression)
Does Japanese development hang onto too much pride to stand up and say lets change, lets create?
Can the industry survive developing it's own games/genre/brands and selling solely to its own market?
Do (some) Japanese game now JUST SUCK?
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