Saturday, July 26, 2008

Dead Rising para el Wii








He aquí algunas imágenes del Dead Rising para el Wii. El juego utilizará un engine similar al de Resident Evil 4.


Fuente: The Magic Box.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Miyamoto San presents Wii Music

Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto revealed an ambitious motion-controlled Wii Music title at E3, featuring saxophones, drum kits and more--all controlled by gestures.

This is the drum kit pedals, seriously
At E3 today, Nintendo gave a real-time demo of long-rumored title Wii Music, which will feature gesture-controlled instruments and the new Wii MotionPlus attachment.
Nintendo icon Shigeru Miyamoto told the audience that Nintendo designed Wii Music to allow everyone to experience the joy of performing music.
When players play a saxophone, for example, they hold the controller as they would a real sax. Same for drums, which will use the Wii Balance Board as the kit pedals.
While most music games today require you to press buttons with precise timing to match symbols on screen, Wii Music relies on the gestures and placement of the Wiimote to create songs.
There will be 50 different instruments in all, including drums, piano, guitar, violin and saxophone, all of which you play using the same positions and gestures as the real thing. There was no timing, as in Guitar Hero or Rock Band, as the gestures, button presses, and timing of the player's movements were controlling the action.The software won't grade your performances, Miyamoto said, but it will record them and allow you to create music videos with up to four people.

The video link is here.

Source: GamePro.

Wii Motion Plus


Nintendo announced Wii MotionPlus for Wii, an add-on that attached to the end of the Wii Remote to provide more comprehensive tracking of player's arm position and orientation, which would enhance precision when playing games such as first person shooter.


Source: The Magic Box

Imagenes del Wii Sports Resort.




Here are some new images of Nintendo's Wii Sports Resort, a new collection of fun sports games which make use of the new Wii MotionPlus add-on, for more responsive and realistic experience. The Wii MotionPlus and Accelerometer will be bundled with the game, Wii MotionPlus plugs into the base of the Wii Remote, and the Accelerometer attaches to the sensor bar. The game will have many new activities like sword play, power cruising (water scooter racing) and disc dog (tossing discs to Mii dog).



Source: The MagicBox

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Ebay bids Super Famicom signed by Miyamoto

As much as Nintendo is known for its stable of franchises and iconic characters, one of the most preeminent mascots of the Kyoto-based gaming giant is none other than its jovial senior managing director, Shigeru Miyamoto. Aside from laying the foundation for the publisher's current success by creating figures such as Mario, Link, and Donkey Kong, to name a few, Miyamoto is often credited as a primary contributor in the development of Nintendo's hardware, including the chart-topping Wii.
So, how much would one of these systems be worth were it signed by the legendary game designer? In seven days and counting, the world will know, as a listing for a Miyamoto-signed Super Famicom has surfaced on Internet auction site eBay. In addition to the graffiti'd console with appropriate cords, the auction includes a number of Super Famicom staples, including Super Donkey Kong; Super Mario Kart; Super Mario Bros. 1, 2, and 3; Mario & Wario; and Mikey's Tokyo Disneyland Adventure, as well as a Super Game Boy.
Unlike most auctions of this ilk, the swag comes with little backstory, other than the auctioneer linking to a nondescriptive blog post in which he apparently met Miyamoto at an event in 2005.

Source: Gamespot

Friday, February 1, 2008

Rock Band confirmed for Wii

Last February, an Activision conference call revealed the existence of the Wii edition of Guitar Hero. Though unsurprising, the announcement was welcomed by owners of the still-scarce console looking to embrace their inner Yngwie Malmsteen. Despite a very public disc recall, it was also immensely profitable. The Wii edition of Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock sold over 1.2 million units and generated $110 million in the US alone through December 31, 2007.

Today, a post-earnings-report conference call held by Electronic Arts revealed the existence of a Wii version of Rock Band, developed by Guitar Hero creators Harmonix. Though Rock Band is officially published by MTV Games, EA distributes the game via its EA Partners program, and will apparently do the same with the Wii edition.

"One of the things I'm very proud of is the partnership between Electronic Arts and MTV," said EA CEO John Riccitiello to analysts. "In terms of pacing the next few quarters, you're probably well aware of the more than $2.5 million music downloads that have occurred on Rock Band. What's probably the most interesting pieces right now is the coming launch on the Wii, the continued sale of the core platforms in North America, and then the fiscal '09 launch across Europe against all of the SKU. So, frankly for the balance of our Q4 and the first half of fiscal '09, Rock Band is a key focus." (Emphasis added.)

Riccitiello's comments confirm the existence of the Wii Rock Band and the fact that it will be released in the 12 months after April 1, when EA's 2009 financial year begins. Unfortunately, no other information was made available about the game, and inquiries sent to EA and Harmonix representatives were unanswered as of press time.

Friday, December 28, 2007

Wii entra al mundo LIVE. Wii gets into the LIVE world.

Jugar en línea con CV y chat con voz

El presidente de NOA, Reggie Fils-Aime posiblemente esté planeando una significativa actualización a la Consola Virtual de Nintendo; “no nos sorprendería” si la opción de chat con voz llegara al Wii. Por Tom Magrino
Pokémon Snap, llegó semanas atrás como parte de la agenda de la actualización de la Consola Virtual, permitiendo a los jugadores compartir las fotos que ellos tomen en el juego y enviárselas a sus amigos vía internet gracias a la funcionalidad de compartir fotos que tiene el Wii. Viendo estas capacidades traspasar un juego de la Consola Virtual es tangible. Ahora se corren los rumores de que pronto le agregaran una nueva funcionalidad de jugar en línea con títulos de la CV así como tablas de puntos o algunos modos multijugador como se puede encontrar en selectos títulos de Xbox Live Arcade classics.
Sin embargo, esos rumores se eliminaron el día de hoy durante una charla telefónica con el presidente de Nintendo of America, Reggie Fils-Aime. Aunque la principal preocupación que tiene en estos momentos Nintendo es la falta de consolas en los almacenes para la temporada navideña, Fils-Aime dio algunas pequeñas pistas acerca de los planes a futuro que tiene la consentida consola de Nintendo.
"En términos de la Consola Virtual, nuestro principal objetivo es dejar esos juegos legendarios intactos justo como fueron lanzados hace muchos años,” dijo.
"Una de las pequeñas excepciones de eso fue que hicimos unos mínimos cambios con Pokémon Snap, por ejemplo. No nos anticipamos haciendo la compatibilidad en línea para juegos de la Consola Virtual. Sólo realizamos modificaciones para el intercambio de imágenes."
Además de darnos puntos interesantes con respecto a los planes de la Casa de Mario. Fils-Aime también nos hizo algunos comentarios con respecto al servicio de chat con voz que posiblemente será algo que tenían pensado desde hace tiempo, una vez que el apropiado periférico de comunicación esté listo.
"En términos de chat de voz en línea, como tú sabes, estamos haciendo constantes cambios," dijo el ejecutivo. "Ciertamente nuestro sistema tiene la compatibilidad para chat de voz en línea; lo que estamos finalizando es el periférico que permita hablar al usuario mientras se encuentra jugando, de hecho es algo que se encuentra disponible en el DS ciertamente es algo que nosotros valoramos y algo que nosotros constantemente estamos viendo y no me sorprendería ver esa capacidad en nuestro sistema."

Fuente: GameSpot en Español.

Source: GameSpot in Spanish