Nintendo Press Conference
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- Hero of Time
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Nintendo Press Conference
http://kotaku.com/5057867/liveblogging- ... e-liveblog
Some recap:
*A brand new DS called the DSi. It has a built-in camera, SD slot and slightly bigger screens. (Better pics)
*The DSi will have a built-in browser to download stuff to it.
*It will cost ¥18,900 (US$179) and will come in white and black colors.
*The Wii will finally have the ability to run downloaded games off the SD card around Spring 2009.
*Nintendo will re-release GameCube games on the Wii, such as Pikmin.
*New games coming on the Wii: Punch Out, Another Code and Sin and Punishment 2.
Edit - I made a mistake on the fourth point. You're only able to save games directly to the SD card at the Wii Shop Channel.
Some recap:
*A brand new DS called the DSi. It has a built-in camera, SD slot and slightly bigger screens. (Better pics)
*The DSi will have a built-in browser to download stuff to it.
*It will cost ¥18,900 (US$179) and will come in white and black colors.
*The Wii will finally have the ability to run downloaded games off the SD card around Spring 2009.
*Nintendo will re-release GameCube games on the Wii, such as Pikmin.
*New games coming on the Wii: Punch Out, Another Code and Sin and Punishment 2.
Edit - I made a mistake on the fourth point. You're only able to save games directly to the SD card at the Wii Shop Channel.
Last edited by snkcube on Tue Oct 07, 2008 7:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
The DSi just looks like a DS Lite with a camera attached to it. I *usually* don't need a camera on my handheld console, thanks you very much. I don't need an SD card reader on my DS, either. This just sounds like Nintendo trying to milk the same product as much as possible.
Last edited by ZH/Franky on Thu Oct 02, 2008 8:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Buzzkill Gil
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Bear in mind that unlike the last time they said this, they're lying their asses off. The DS was priced higher than any new Gameboy release for a reason. Nintendo expected it to be a true third platform.Gil_Hamilton wrote:You forgot that the DSi is a "third platform" and is not going to replace the DSLite.
Just like the DS was a "third pillar" and was not going to replace the GameBoy Advance.
This time, however, they're either lying their asses off, or truly delusional. I think it's the former, but the latter would not surprise me a bit. Nintendo has been known to be fuckwits who cannot see opportunities or the consequences of their actions(Good consequences or bad ones). The last ten years have shown this.
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And now that the retards are out of the way....Franky wrote:The DSi just looks like a DS Lite with a camera attached to it. I *usually* don't need a camera on my handheld console, thanks you very much. I don't need an SD card reader on my DS, either. This just sounds like Nintendo trying to milk the same product as much as possible.
I don't think they really believed in the third pillar argument then, either.I.S.T. wrote:Bear in mind that unlike the last time they said this, they're lying their asses off. The DS was priced higher than any new Gameboy release for a reason. Nintendo expected it to be a true third platform.Gil_Hamilton wrote:You forgot that the DSi is a "third platform" and is not going to replace the DSLite.
Just like the DS was a "third pillar" and was not going to replace the GameBoy Advance.
It was blatantly obvious that if they were selling two handheld systems, they would be in competition with each other. Especially since the DS was backwards-compatible with it's predecessor(or sideways-compatible with it's companion system, whatever).
As for what was REALLY running through their heads...
The GameBoy at the time was their primary source of income, and the pain of the VirtualBoy was still fairly recent.
Of course, even though the VB DID occupy a unique niche, it was branded with the Boy name. Not the full GameBoy name, but there wasn't an established lineage yet. The Boy on the end of the name was "good enough."
I'm reasonably sure that the third pillar argument was just so they wouldn't risk damaging the GameBoy brand should something go horribly wrong.
If it was a failure, they could roll the DS chipset into a conventional single-screen system and call it the GameBoy Turbo, or whatever. It wouldn't be following the hideous disaster of the GameBoy Twin, and they can just move on with life.
If the DS proved a success, as it did, they could axe the GameBoy and no one would really care. It's not coincidence that once the DS proved itself viable, the GBA withered and died.
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- Regular
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I'm not even going to comment about it having two cameras. So many awful jokes come to mind. Anyway it at least sounds pretty awesome from what they're telling us. Hopefully it's compatible with "homebrew" flash cards too. 
Here's the nipnog page with all the system specs.
http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/dsi.html

Here's the nipnog page with all the system specs.
http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/dsi.html
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- Devil Summoner
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I dunno, it's still the same system, right? This strikes me as exceptionally gimmicky. It's not really doing anything new other than the camera, and you can hardly build games to rely on the camera peripheral when there's such a large installed userbase that doesn't have the camera. This strikes me as an "evolution" in the same vein as the SP->Micro step. Unless the system had more horsepower than the current DS (just as the DS had more horsepower than the GBA) I don't think we can really call this Nintendo's "next" portable system. The stated improvements certainly aren't enough to make me want to switch.
[url=http://agtp.romhack.net]Aeon Genesis ~ We eat ham and jam and spam-alot[/url]
Of course we can't call it Nintendo's "next" portable system, it isn't. I don't think anyone's pretending it is. Just as the PSP 3000 isn't with its TV-out functionality.
Though, the on-board storage and the DSi store or whatever they call it, doesn't seem gimmicky to me at all. Seems like the DS' answer to Wiiware.
Though, the on-board storage and the DSi store or whatever they call it, doesn't seem gimmicky to me at all. Seems like the DS' answer to Wiiware.
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Hard Work Often Pays Off After Time, but Laziness Always Pays Off Now.[/size]
You stole my joke.Gil_Hamilton wrote:You forgot that the DSi is a "third platform" and is not going to replace the DSLite.
Just like the DS was a "third pillar" and was not going to replace the GameBoy Advance.

To this day I am still confused by that marketing BS from when the DS was released. I keep thinking the DS isn't a game platform. Way to go marketroids.
http://press.nintendo.com/articles.jsp?id=16456
Like woah?
- WiiWare delivers great new games directly to Wii consoles that are connected to the Internet. Nintendo's downloadable game service will see games like: [...]
Cave Story: This title is an action-adventure game with new, exclusive content and features created only for the WiiWare version.
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Re: Nintendo Press Conference
You can't actually play the games from the memory card, you have to transfer the files back to main memory.
The PSP-2000 added the TV out functionality. However, its' only composite cable output was for UMD movies. Component cable users could output UMD movies and PSP games onto TVs.blackmyst wrote:Of course we can't call it Nintendo's "next" portable system, it isn't. I don't think anyone's pretending it is. Just as the PSP 3000 isn't with its TV-out functionality.
Though, the on-board storage and the DSi store or whatever they call it, doesn't seem gimmicky to me at all. Seems like the DS' answer to Wiiware.
>.>
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Re: Nintendo Press Conference
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- Buzzkill Gil
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That was due to technical restrictions. And games could only be output in progressive-scan mode, too. Not all component inputs accept progscan.I.S.T. wrote:The PSP-2000 added the TV out functionality. However, its' only composite cable output was for UMD movies. Component cable users could output UMD movies and PSP games onto TVs.blackmyst wrote:Of course we can't call it Nintendo's "next" portable system, it isn't. I don't think anyone's pretending it is. Just as the PSP 3000 isn't with its TV-out functionality.
Though, the on-board storage and the DSi store or whatever they call it, doesn't seem gimmicky to me at all. Seems like the DS' answer to Wiiware.
>.>
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- Buzzkill Gil
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I figured it was technical constrictions(They just didn't build the damn thing to do it over Composite), but I thought all Component TVs were compatible with it, not just ED/HDTVs.Gil_Hamilton wrote:That was due to technical restrictions. And games could only be output in progressive-scan mode, too. Not all component inputs accept progscan.I.S.T. wrote:The PSP-2000 added the TV out functionality. However, its' only composite cable output was for UMD movies. Component cable users could output UMD movies and PSP games onto TVs.blackmyst wrote:Of course we can't call it Nintendo's "next" portable system, it isn't. I don't think anyone's pretending it is. Just as the PSP 3000 isn't with its TV-out functionality.
Though, the on-board storage and the DSi store or whatever they call it, doesn't seem gimmicky to me at all. Seems like the DS' answer to Wiiware.
>.>
Also, Gameboy Micro=FAIL
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- Buzzkill Gil
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Naw. They needed all 480 lines to get the full game image. It was either drop half the lines from each frame, or force progscan for gameplay.I.S.T. wrote:I figured it was technical constrictions(They just didn't build the damn thing to do it over Composite), but I thought all Component TVs were compatible with it, not just ED/HDTVs.Gil_Hamilton wrote:That was due to technical restrictions. And games could only be output in progressive-scan mode, too. Not all component inputs accept progscan.I.S.T. wrote:The PSP-2000 added the TV out functionality. However, its' only composite cable output was for UMD movies. Component cable users could output UMD movies and PSP games onto TVs.blackmyst wrote:Of course we can't call it Nintendo's "next" portable system, it isn't. I don't think anyone's pretending it is. Just as the PSP 3000 isn't with its TV-out functionality.
Though, the on-board storage and the DSi store or whatever they call it, doesn't seem gimmicky to me at all. Seems like the DS' answer to Wiiware.
>.>
Also, Gameboy Micro=FAIL
And the SP is fail, too. It's entirely too small, except for the shoulder buttons being too far out.
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gb micro can't play metroid 2 either, so fail either way.Gil_Hamilton wrote:Trade your SP in for a GBMicro while you're at it?odditude wrote:if i trade my old ds in for this, then i'd be taking up extra room by carrying my sp around with me as well as the dsi.
Besides, your DS can't play Metroid 2, so you need a GameBoy anyways.
Why yes, my shift key *IS* broken.