Nintendo's big E3 surprise comes in little box

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newstech
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Nintendo's big E3 surprise comes in little box

Post by newstech »

Hey, check out the buzz on Nintendo's mini-console, Revolution.
By Richard Shim, and John Borland, CNET News.com

LOS ANGELES--Nintendo, once the unrivaled king of the home video game business, released details on its planned new game console on Tuesday, and unveiled a new mini-portable device called the Game Boy Micro.

Nintendo's crowded event at the Kodak Theater here was aimed at taking back some of the buzz captured by Microsoft and Sony, each of which unveiled powerful next-generation game consoles within the last week. But the display of the tiny new game player, smaller than an iPod Mini, took many by surprise.

The new mini-console is aimed at a generation of game players increasingly accustomed to carrying tiny cell phones loaded with games in their pockets--something impossible with the more powerful new PlayStation Portable from Sony.

"No matter how tight your jeans are, the Game Boy Micro will fit in them," said Reggie Fils-Aime, Nintendo of America's executive vice president of sales and marketing. "We created the portable game space, and we're not moving out."

The new console is still known by its code name, "Revolution." It will be significantly smaller than its rivals', about the size of several stacked DVD cases, and will come in several as-yet-undetermined colors.

The Revolution will play DVDs, have built-in Wi-Fi and an SD memory card slot, and 512MB of flash memory, the company said. Executives said the company would offer a free online gaming service, helping to accelerate the move of console gaming to the Net.

Nintendo executives said the console will be released in 2006.

The Revolution release is critical for Nintendo, which has fared the most poorly of the three major console companies over the past few years.

While retaining significant loyalty among a core audience, particularly younger children and fans of a few Nintendo-only titles such as the "Zelda" series, the company has seen its market ranking among standalone consoles slip to third.

According to Jupiter Research, Sony led in the United States with 43 percent of the games console market at the end of 2004, followed by Microsoft with 19 percent, and Nintendo's GameCube with 14 percent. Nintendo's Game Boy still dominates the handheld gaming market, although Sony's new PlayStation Portable has raised a serious threat to that crown.

Nintendo's new console will be built around a new IBM processor and a graphics chip from ATI. The company did not initially provide detailed specifications on the guts, however.

The company is taking a less technology-focused approach than Sony and Microsoft, which are touting the processor-heavy, high-definition quality of their graphics. Nintendo President Satoru Iwata alluded to the spiraling costs of developing for the other platforms, and said his system might compete differently.

"Development costs are pushing into eight figures, and developers are endangered," Iwata said. With the Revolution, "big ideas can prevail over big budgets," he added.

Much of the response to the console, as with its rivals, will depend on what games will initially be available. Executives said early games would include "Smash Brothers," "Mario Baseball," "Super Mario Strikers," "Dance Dance Revolution," "Mario Mix" and "Mario Party 7."

The Revolution will be backward-compatible with the GameCube, and fans will also be able to access downloads of games from earlier consoles, the company said.

The new Game Boy Micro will have the same processing power and play the same games as the Game Boy Advance SP. At 4 inches wide and 2 inches tall, with a 2-inch screen, it will weigh about 2.8 ounces, or about the same as 80 paper clips, the company said. It will be released this fall.

Richard Shim reported from Los Angeles. John Borland reported from San Francisco.
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1040_22-5710511.html
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BEan
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Post by BEan »

under the xbox thread wrote:
BEan wrote:I waiting to see what nintendo puts on the table.
infinitevalence wrote:something under powered and too expencive with limited game support and a small number of interesting games aimed at younger gamers.
BEan wrote:be prepared to eat thoes words.
Wait tommorow, the press confrence is at 11 am I believe.
Here is the link to see all the confrences.
http://www.gamespot.com/e3/e3live.html

Granted they didn't have alot of tech demos or details, we will see more from the Tokoyo game show in the fall. They did have a good number of developers that are working on Revolution games.


infinitevalence: Don't worry you won't have to eat all of your words yet?

J/K
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