LEVEL review scores (Swedish magazine)
Posted on 16 years ago by Brian(@NE_Brian) in News, Wii | 3 Comments
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots: 10
Haze: 4
Boom Blox: 9
FFVII: Crisis Core: 8
GRID: 7
Iron Man: 2
Pool Party: 5
LEGO Indiana Jones: 7
Echocrome: 7
Thanks to Katrina for the tip.
Japanese software sales thus far
Posted on 16 years ago by Brian(@NE_Brian) in DS, News, Wii | 0 comments
Coming from the latest Famitsu…
– Wii Sports (Wii, Nintendo): 2,924,690 copies sold
Release: 12/02/06
– Senjou no Valkyria (PS3, Sega): 112,627 copies sold
Release: 4/24/08
– Super Smash Bros. Brawl (Wii, Nintendo): 1,634,642 copies sold
Release: 1/31/08
– Mario Party DS (NDS, Nintendo): 1,701,871 copies sold
Release: 11/08/07
– Animal Crossing: Wild World (NDS, Nintendo): 4,653,798
Release: 11/23/05
Two WiiWare Games and Two Virtual Console Games Added to Wii Shop Channel
Posted on 16 years ago by Brian(@NE_Brian) in News, Wii | 0 comments
WiiWare
Dr. Mario Online RX
Family Table Tennis
VC
City Connection
Metal Slug
This week’s Wii-kly Update pretty much covers the full spectrum. Maybe you’ll want to blast away with an arsenal of old-school weapons. But then again, three-day weekends are a good time to relax. So maybe you’ll take a wild road trip or settle in for some table tennis. And if you overdo it, we have a physician standing by.
Nintendo adds new and classic games to the Wii Shop Channel at 9 a.m. Pacific time every Monday. Wii™ owners with a high-speed Internet connection can redeem Wii Points™ to download the games. Wii Points can be purchased in the Wii Shop Channel or at retail outlets. This week’s new games are:
WiiWare™
Dr. Mario® Online Rx (Nintendo, 1-4 players, Rated E for Everyone, 1,000 Wii Points): The doctor is in! Mario™ takes a break from his adventuring ways and once again dons his stethoscope for a new generation of germ-battling mayhem. In addition to the classic mode of using vitamins to exterminate viruses, you’ll find two battle modes and an online multiplayer mode where you can hone your skills against players from around the world. Feel like challenging a friend who doesn’t have Dr. Mario Online Rx? Then the WiiWare-exclusive Friend Battle Demo is just what the doctor ordered. Or maybe you’d like some help taking on those nasty viruses? Try out Virus Buster, where four players can simultaneously move capsules simply by pointing at them with a Wii Remote™ controller. Any way you look at it, Dr. Mario Online Rx is a prescription for fun that everyone can enjoy.
Nintendo: Wii Fit will be bigger than GTAIV in the long run
Posted on 16 years ago by Brian(@NE_Brian) in News, Wii | 0 comments
“Long term, it will absolutely be bigger. I’m quite open to say that. We will continue to support Wii Fit because its an important product for us and its an important product for our consumers now. Long term, definitely.” – Rose Lappin, Nintendo of Australia Managing Director
Wii Fit will be big, no doubt. However, GTAIV is a pretty big game, too. If Nintendo is able to reach out to the casual audience – which it seems to be doing – Wii Fit will do great in the sales department.
VC releases in Japan this week
Posted on 16 years ago by Brian(@NE_Brian) in News, Wii | 0 comments
Super Famicom
– Ganbare Goemon 2: Kiteretsu Shougun Magginesu (Konami)
PC-Engine
– Fire Pro Wrestling 2nd Bout (Spike)
NeoGeo
– Ninja Combat (D4)
Japan
– Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII (PSP): 800,000
– Dragon Quest IV (NDS): 1.5 million
– Dragon Quest Swords (Wii): 490,000
– Final Fantasy IV (NDS): 590,000
– Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings (NDS): 540,000
– Itadaki Street DS (NDS): 430,000
– Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Ring of Fates (NDS): 380,000
USA
– Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII (NDS): 450,000
– Dragon Quest Swords (Wii): 110,000
– Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings (NDS): 220,000
– Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Ring of Fates (NDS): 160,000
Europe
– Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings (NDS): 280,000
– Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Ring of Fates: 150,000
– Final Fantasy III (NDS): 480,000
Good vs. Wiivil
Posted on 16 years ago by Program in Features, Wii | 0 comments
Since it was introduced, the Nintendo Wii system has been hailed as a revolution in video gaming because of its motion-activated controls that allow a player to participate physically. That’s all well and good when the motion is a tennis stroke. But what about when it’s a sawing motion, one used to separate a limb from a body, and the scene on the screen shows all the gory details? The game to attract scrutiny “Manhunt 2”, from Rockstar Games, the company behind the controversial Grand Theft Auto series, but it is already creating a stir. In the game, the player assumes the role of an escaped mental patient who goes on a killing spree. In the United States the game has received the most restrictive rating possible, ‘Adult Only’, from the nation’s Entertainment Software Rating Board . An AO rating, which is rare and typically applied to games with mature content, means nobody under 18 can buy the game. Critic’s argue that the combination of Manhunt 2 (the game noted for its “sustained and cumulative casual sadism”), with the Wii the game controller that’s so engrossingly interactive that it led to a multitude of video game incidents, provides far too much reality for the the young audience of video gamers, the under 18 set.”You can use a saw blade and cut upward into a foe’s groin and buttocks, motioning forward and backward with the Wii remote as you go.”
“The more realistic and involving the game gets, and the greater the similarity between the action in the game and real life action, the stronger the negative effects would be,” says Joanne Cantor, a Wisconsin research psychologist who has spent 30 years studying the effects of media violence on children. “No, your son may not turn into a criminal. But exposure will take a toll on his life somewhere, probably in interpersonal relationships. These are subtle effects. They take time to surface. A teen isn’t going to notice them.”
David Finkelhor , co director of the Family Research Lab at the University of New Hampshire, says no game alone is going to drag a child into criminal activity. “It’s when you have other potentiating factors — family problems, mental health issues, extreme stress, dangerous neighborhoods,” he says. “Playing these games with or without the Wii enhancement is not going to take the typical teenage boy and make a killer out of him.” In fact, he says, in the 10 or 12 years in which violent video games have proliferated, the juvenile crime rate has gone down, as have school homicides.
“No question Manhunt goes beyond the pale in terms of violence. I’m sure this one will be worse,” he says. “But that Wii interactivity adds an extra kicker to what happens in the brain is purely speculative. The Wii technology isn’t as bad as some folks say or as good as Nintendo wants you to believe.” Dennis McCauley, editor of gamepolitics.com says.
Just to be clear, however, the AO version will never see the light of day. Turns out, Sony and Nintendo won’t allow AO games on their systems.
(The Entertainment Software Rating Board gives the company 30 days from the time of the AO rating to resubmit for a lesser rating.)
“The Nintendo company is knowingly exposing our children to disturbing acts of foppishness right in our living rooms,” said Roberts of PAW. “Even more frightening, the motion-sensing technology teaches them that the only way to resolve conflicts is to flail their arms in acts of fruity aggression.”
Assuming the children are safe, is virtually disemboweling someone with the full body interaction provided by the Wii different than pressing a few buttons in other video game systems such as PS2? Of course, it is acceptable under the Constitution. What we’re pondering here is an image problem.
In the end, Nintendo and Rockstar’s parent company may end up having no choice but to meet somewhere in the middle.
Circuit City
Free $10 gift card with purchase of Deca Sports
Free $10 gift card with purchase of Death Jr: Root of Evil
GT Pro Series (Wii) – $9.99
Blazing Angels: Squadrions of WWII (Wii) – $9.99
Chicken Shoot (Wii) – $9.99
Cars (Wii) – $9.99
Kawasaki Jet Ski (Wii) – $9.99
Arctic Tale (Wii) – $9.99
Sonic Rush (DS) – $9.99
Cooking Mama (DS) – $9.99
Disney’s The Little Mermaid (DS) – $9.99
Star Wars: Lethal Alliance (DS) – $9.99
Namco Museum (DS) – $9.99
4 – Game Pack: Clue / Mouse Trap / Perfection / Aggravation (DS) – $9.99
Sea Monsters (DS) – $9.99
Pokemon Emerald Version (GBA) – $9.99
Sonic the Hegdgehog (GBA) – $9.99
3 Game Pack: Life/Yahtzee/Payday (GBA) – $9.99
3 Game Pack: Candy Land / Chutes and Ladders / Memory Game (GBA) – $9.99
Circuit City sales (5/25 – 5/26)
The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass (DS) – $17.49
Deal or No Deal (DS) – $9.99
Showtime Championship Boxing (Wii) – $14.99
M&M’s Kart Racing (Wii) – $14.99
Target
Game Party (Wii) – $19.99
SpiderMan 3 (Wii) – $19.99
AMF Bowling Pinbusters (Wii) – $19.99
New Mario Kart tourney to spotlight boss from Super Mario Galaxy
Posted on 16 years ago by Brian(@NE_Brian) in News, Wii | 0 comments
The Mario Kart Wii tournaments have been a bit disappointing to say the least, although the next one may actually be interesting. The upcoming tournament, according to Nintendo’s Japanese website, is supposed to spotlight one of the bosses from Super Mario Galaxy. While far from the best, it’s interesting to note that this will be the first time that users will see original content. The website also reports that the tournament should begin in early June.