Showing posts with label Wii Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wii Games. Show all posts
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Nintendo to stop making Wii console for Japan market
TOKYO — Japanese game console maker Nintendo said Wednesday it will stop making its Wii console for the Japanese market, but will keep producing it internationally.
The move to abandon the home console, which competes with Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Sony’s PlayStation 3, will allow Nintendo to focus its efforts on its successor.
“Our new generation Wii U console is already on the market and allows users to play software originally designed for the Wii,” a Nintendo spokesman told AFP.
“So this is part of the transition of our products to new models,” he said.
The company will keep producing Wii for markets abroad including its cheaper version Wii mini, he said.
Since its release in 2006 Wii has sold more than 100 million units worldwide.
The Wii disrupted the world of consoles on its launch, with its emphasis on family-orientated gaming that made use of wireless controllers fitted with accelerometers.
These controllers, which sparked the production of games where players could actually mimic the body movements of a sport or playing a musical instrument, were widely copied.
Nintendo launched the Wii U console late last year, although analysts said a lack of games took away some of the fizz the company had been hoping for after its 3DS console saw disappointing demand abroad.
Nintendo, maker of the iconic Donkey Kong and Super Mario brands, has been locked in a war with Sony and Microsoft, makers of the PlayStation and Xbox video game consoles, for dominance of a sector worth about $44 billion a year.
Nintendo swung to a net profit of $88 million in the three months to June as a weakening yen helped inflate its overseas result.
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, November 19, 2012
Wii U Launch Day Resource Round-Up
A new era of video game consoles kicked off at midnight with the launch of the Nintendo’s dual-screen wielding platform, the Wii U. Whether you’ve already run to the store and picked one up, or still aren’t sure whether you see a new Nintendo console in your future, you probably have a lot of questions about it: “What exactly can this thing do?” “What games should I buy?” “Do I really need to download that day-one patch?”
First of all, the answers to those three answers are: ”Right now, it plays video games.” ”Generally, speaking stick to console exclusives like Super Mario Bros U. and ZombiiU.” Lastly; “Technically no, but without the patch you won’t be able to play online, buy games via Nintendo’s E-Shop, or play Wii games, among other things.” Those answers, however, barely scratch the surface of everything you should know about the platform, so we’ve compiled a list of resources so you can all of the answers you need.
- A Nintendo history lesson, as a prologue to the Wii U (Wired)
- What can Wii U do before you download that massive day-one patch? (Polygon)
- A complete list of every Wii U game available today and in the near future (GamesRadar)
- How To: Transfer your Wii game saves to your Wii U (IGN)
- An inside look at the guts of the Wii U gamepad (Twitch.TV)
- Nintendo’s terms of service for MiiVerse are hilarious (Kotaku)
- Jeff Ryan, author of Nintendo’s corporate biography, picks apart the Wii U (Kill Screen)
Interestingly enough, hardware-centric tech sites like Gizmodo and TechCrunch have generally been a little more lenient than their gaming counterparts, though they’ve taken issue with their own set of problems. Both The Verge and Engadget, for example, are concerned with the quality of the gamepad’s construction.
For all the negativity, however, there was also plenty of optimism about the console’s core features. Apparently the act of “cutting the cord” and playing Wii U games solely on the portable gamepad screen works so well, that some reviewers may prefer playing games that way. Kotaku editor-in-chief Stephen Totilo, calling the console “a bold new player” is excited that Nintendo has finally made a machine that has the same features as the competition, while showing the potential to become something more.
In the end, the thing that will determine whether or not you buy a Wii U, at least this year, will be your love Nintendo and their games. As with the Wii, the best thing Nintendo has to offer right now is the promise of their own unique games. Though that may change as more features and new games become available, as of today the Wii U is a Nintendo product for Nintendo people.
source: geekosystem.com
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