Nintendo DS
Nintendo DS
- Dual Screens open up new possibilities – use the touch screen as an inventory reference for role-playing games, to view maps for your favorite strategy game, or see racing action from two perspectives at once
- Navigate menus or access inventory items simply by touching the screen with stylus or fingertip; tough film over touchscreen protects it
- Advanced 3D graphics engine and 16-channel audio, for graphics and sound that are superior to other portable game systems
- All-new PictoChat feature allows DS users to write messages with an on-screen keyboard or the stylus and send them wirelessly
- Built-in microphone port for voice control of games, or for voice chat with other DS players
Nintendo’s latest innovation, code-named Nintendo DS, provides users with a unique game-play experience using features never before offered by any other home console or hand-held game system. This portable personal entertainment and communications unit provides owners with new perspectives on dual screens, new control using both touch and voice, and new connections with two kinds of wireless game play. Two LCD screens offer one of the most groundbreaking game-play advances ever developed: experiencing a game from two perspectives at once. The lower screen offers PDA-like touch capabilities, while the dual-screen technology means you no longer have to rely on just buttons to move characters or shift perspectives.In a surprising number of ways, the Nintendo DS is quite unlike any video game system that’s come before. First, there’s the two screens, one above and one below. The idea might seem like a gimmick — the screens are far enough apart that you won’t be able to see them as one long screen — but the format works in a complementary way. Depending on the game, the DS serves action in one screen and details, maps, stats, or alternate views in the other. Switching your eyes between screens takes a little getting used to, but quickly becomes automatic, like checking a rear-view mirror while driving. Both screens are back-lit and a little larger than that of the Game Boy Advance SP, so they’ll be easy to see in most conditions.
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| Players can control games using the touch-sensitive bottom screen of the DS. |
The good news is that Nintendo has stressed a lot of comfort options, both in the operating system and in their games. Want to play Metroid without the touch-pad? Select a different control scheme in the game’s option menu, which also includes configurations for lefties. You can even customize your DS to automatically play the inserted title or to start with the main menu, choose which screen to display your GBA games, to add a nickname for wireless play, and more.
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| Up to 16 players can connect wirelessly within a 100-foot radius. |
Also, unlike all but the earliest video game systems, the DS comes with a built-in application. It’s called PictoChat, and it allows people to write and draw pictures in a chat-room format. Since it’s built in to the DS operating system, you’ll always be able to interact with other DS users.
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| The built-in program PictoChat lets you write and draw with others. |
Overall, the Nintendo DS represents a rather large leap in portable gaming. With some mystery shrouding the future abilities of its internal microphone (voice recognition) and its IEEE 802.11 wireless network, the DS may have left some surprises up its sleeve. –Porter B. Hall
Pros:
- Great design marries innovative new features with great features of old systems and lots of customizable options
- Wireless up to 100 feet
- Built-in PictoChat lets you write and draw pictures with up to 15 other DS users
Cons:
- Sometimes hard to see and use the touch screen at the same time
- Wireless multiplayer feature won’t work with GBA games
- Can’t connect to other wireless devices…yet
List Price: $ 129.99
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