I already answered this once, about IDE problems and language features, but there's something else Delphi needs, from a more psychological angle.
I attended a Delphi users' group meeting last week, and if I wasn't the youngest guy in the room I was pretty close to it, and I'm closer to 30 than I am to 20. Young programmers are the future of programming, and they're all learning the C syntax family in school.
Delphi needs to start attracting high school-age hobbyist programmers! Add in a good, solid game-development framework like Asphyre to the standard Delphi package, release it as part of a free hobbyist edition, (like Turbo Delphi of a few years ago,) and let all the kids start to learn how easy it is to have fun with programming.
Microsoft understands this. Just look at Visual Studio. There was really no reason for them to put VB (pre-.NET) into VS. It was just a toy language, without enough power to justify placing it at parity with "serious" languages like C++. But from a psychological perspective it was a brilliant move.
How many of you out there first got into coding with those little "write games in BASIC" books? I know I did! VB drew those kids in as they grew older and brought them around to the Visual Studio way of coding. I'd have been the same way if a high school friend hadn't introduced me to a brand new "visual Pascal" program called Delphi. Embarcadero needs game-development tools to get young programmers on board. And then, as they get a bit older, they realize that oh by the way, this fun language they've been playing around with can also do heavy, serious stuff like multitier databases and VOIP programs.