I just saw this question in the "related questions" list at Why Nullable<T> is a struct? and I think my answer there applies here too. The whole point of Nullable<T>
is to act like a value type in every regard except for the ability to take a null value.
The null of a null reference can be looked at in two ways. One is that it isn't referencing anything, another is that it has no meaningful value. These things are pretty much two different ways of saying the same thing, but they have different uses.
Nullable<T>
gives us the ability to say "this has no meaningful value" and to that extent it can have the same semantics as a null reference, but it is not like a reference in any other way. When null it's nullity is purely that "no meaningful value" null - not "doesn't refer to anything" and when not null it is holding a value, not referring to it.
(Aaronaught argues that this means a Nullable can't really contain null, while I disagree because at the level at which it uses it can have a semantic null, his point is worth considering in that even when "null" a Nullable is different to a reference - really our disagreement is a matter of which level of abstraction we choose to use).