Just in case you were busy and miss out the nice games that came out during the previous week, you still have a chance to recap some of the titles here.
Nintendo's new DS Lite is thinner, lighter, and brighter than the original DS. It's available in Japan as of March 2, 2006, with a U.S. launch to follow later this year.
In a recent interview with Engadget, Reggie Fils-Aime, Nintendo of America's executive vice president of sales and marketing, talked somewhat openly about Revolution, the DS, Nintendo as a company, and his thoughts on the competition. IGN Revolution followed up the interview by posting some new information about Revolution development kits, so we've included that as well.
Nintendo has announced that two of the three launch colors of the DS Lite have been pushed back a little over a week. The Ice Blue and Navy Blue colors will be released on March 11th instead of the previously scheduled March 2nd. However, the Crystal White color will still ...
According to a scan of next month's Nintendo Power, the first original Mario platformer since 2002 (or longer, if you wish to discredit Super Mario Sunshine) will finally be released to the world on May 7th--since this was listed in an official US Nintendo magazine, we're willing to assume this ...
Passme, an add-on for the Nintendo DS handheld lets you play homebrew games and ROMs from the Internet; this functionality has been around for the DS's main competitor, the Sony PSP, for some time now (though Sony keeps taking ill-starred countermeasures to keep users from installing their own software) and it's nice to see the DS catching up. The "mod chip" only costs about $20.
Japanese fans of Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s dual-screen DS portable game machine may soon be able to surf the Web and watch high-definition television programs on their devices in addition to playing games.