E3 2006: Hands on with Nintendo's Wii and new Dell Designs
by Haider Farhan on May 11, 2006 9:40 AM EST- Posted in
- Trade Shows
The Nintendo Wii
One of the main things everyone is looking forward to seeing this year is the Nintendo Wii. At Nintendo's booth, all we were able to see was the Nintendo DS at first glance but upon closer inspection, Nintendo had placed a barrier surrounding about half of its booth, reaching a good twelve to fifteen feet high. After waiting in an approximately two and a half hour line, we finally had access to the rest of the Nintendo booth. We found an entire setup of about 100 Wii stations with various games loaded. All the games we saw were full production games except for the last three which were still in development.
Like many people, when we first heard about the unique controller Nintendo developed, we had our doubts. However, we had a chance to play around with the Nintendo Wii and our impression has completely changed. We found the controller to be incredibly easy to use. Although the controller was little too sensitive to the motions you make, it's something you get used to the more you use it.
While the main controller is a remote-like device, there are three other types of controllers, namely, the Zapper, the Nunchuk and the Classic. The Zapper is currently a work in progress to be used for the Duckhunt remake, the Nunchuk is used for, from what we saw, football games, and the Classic style controller is designed to be used for NES, SNES and N64 games. There is no initial price tag or specs, although the specs aren't out to impress anyone anyhow. The expected launch date is sometime in November.
The way the remote-like controller works is via an infrared sensor bar which is wired directly to the Wii and can be placed either on top of or below the television. The bar can be placed anywhere as long as the controller is pointing towards it. Some adhesive backing is used to apply the sensor bar.
Update: If you'd like to see a couple videos of Wii in action, we've created a BitTorrent share of the demonstration. The first shows a couple people playing tennis with the new controller, and the second shows a guy with two controls using them as drumsticks. If you want more information about how to use BitTorrent, here's a quick tutorial. We're using Azureus to host the file, which requires the Java JRE. (E-mail Jarred if you have problems.)
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oneils - Thursday, May 11, 2006 - link
Oops, that should probably read: the case being canted forward and sides that swing down...LoneWolf15 - Thursday, May 11, 2006 - link
Didn't see this contest listed on Dell's site...nor a link on Anandtech mentioning how to find out more.
rrcn - Thursday, May 11, 2006 - link
Sorry about that, not sure what happened to the link, but http://www.dell.com/e3">here it is.artifex - Friday, May 12, 2006 - link
I'm looking at the flash site, and I don't see anything that stands out as omg, contest here! Any clues?I wonder if they killed the contest, because dell.com/xmen, which is linked from that flash site, now gets a "not found" redirect.
LanceVance - Thursday, May 11, 2006 - link
I hope you're going to cover the PS3 and provide the same under-the-covers analysis that we saw with the 360 at E3 2005.hoppa - Thursday, May 11, 2006 - link
Is it not obvious yet that the PS3 is a forgotten product? Seriously, how fucking good do the graphics really need to be? It's just gonna throw down the same ol' shit that the 360 has been doing for a few months now. Coughed up sequels that look amazing and play like crap. Forget the PS3. Wii is where its at.