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Nintendo hooks Wii to internet

Oct 10 2007 12:26

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Chiba, Japan - Nintendo hopes to give its popular Wii game console another boost by offering support services to hook the machine to the internet in Japan, the company president said on Wednesday.

A network connection will allow people not only to download games but also play games with others online, as well as gain other content and information from the net. Nintendo is hoping that will draw even more people to the Wii, leading not only to machine sales but game software sales.

Nintendo will work with Japan's top telecommunications company, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, to give support services to connect the Wii in people's homes to the internet, and open a telephone service for technical support, President Satoru Iwata said.

He said details of the support services will be disclosed later.

Nintendo, the Kyoto-based manufacturer of Pokemon and Super Mario games, has scored a hit with its US$250 Wii, which comes with a wand like remote controller for fishing, golfing and other easy-to-play games.

More competition

But competition is heating up with rivals Sony and Microsoft ahead of the key Christmas shopping season.

Wii and Nintendo's DS handheld machine have succeeded in drawing newcomers, including women and the elderly, to games. But more work is needed so that effort doesn't run out of steam, Iwata told reporters at a hall in this Tokyo suburb.

"People tend to get bored, and the sceptics are asking whether it's just a one-time deal," he said. "We must think of the next step."

Iwata said only about 40% of Wii owners in Japan have the console connected to the net. And more games will be available as downloads from the internet, he said.

More manufacturers are also making games for Nintendo machines, rising to about half of the software makers for the DS, up from a quarter last year.

Nintendo has sold 47.3m DS machines worldwide since they went on sale in 2004. The DS has two screens, including one that's touch panel.

Legendary Nintendo designer Shigeru Miyamoto appeared on stage to demonstrate the "Wii Fit," a game planned for December, which allows players to weigh themselves, check their balance and play fitness games.

Miyamoto and guests demonstrated yoga positions, hula hooping and ski jump as living room workouts for the Wii.

Different approach

Nintendo has chosen a different strategy from Sony and Microsoft, with their more expensive machines, and has been trying to woo novices with brain teasers, sport games and virtual pets, instead of the usual shoot-them-ups and role-playing games.

Since Wii went on sale late last year, Nintendo has shipped 9.3m Wiis around the world, with supplies barely keeping up with demand. By the end of this fiscal year in March 2008, Wii global shipments are expected to have reached 22.3m.

Wii sales have surpassed Sony's 5m for the PlayStation 3, which went on sale late last year in Japan and the US and in March in Europe. Microsoft has sold 11.6m Xbox 360 machines in the last two years.

- AP

 
 
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