Remote Control Mario Kart toys tested, don’t drift but do shoot (video)

Remote Control Mario Kart toys tested, don't drift but do shoot (video)

To win at Mario Kart on a console you must master two things: drifting and power-ups. Half of that is replicated in these R/C Mario Kart toys, which we saw standing still last month but now can finally see in action motoring around what looks to be either Corporate Carpet Raceway or CDR Castle. The controller emits that familiar jingling item select sound when you’ve snagged a virtual power-up, and you can see how mushrooms boost your speed while banana peels cause your opponents’ cars to freak out. Sadly there is no drifting to be found in this version of the game, but we’re wondering if a little tape on the rear wheels wouldn’t help address that shortcoming.

[Thanks, Jarom]

Continue reading Remote Control Mario Kart toys tested, don’t drift but do shoot (video)

Remote Control Mario Kart toys tested, don’t drift but do shoot (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 13:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo issues a 3DS release date date

Find the headline confusing? Well, the explanation won’t help to assuage the muddle much. A Nintendo spokesman told Bloomberg Japan that Ninty plans to announce the Nintendo 3DS price and release date on September 29th. Thus far, we’ve only seen speculation about pricing (between $249 and $299) and release dates (between October and March, 2011). So yeah, we still don’t know when or for how much but at least we know when we’ll find out when and for how much. Make sense?

Nintendo issues a 3DS release date date originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 05:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo posts Q1 loss on strong Yen and lower DS prices

Although foreshadowed, it’s hard to believe that the once mighty Ninty, a company with unshakable profits even during last year’s global economic downturn, just recorded a Q1 net loss of ¥25.22 billion ($288 million) compared to a net profit of ¥42.32 billion during the same 3-month period a year earlier. Revenues dropped from ¥253.50 billion to ¥188.65 billion. Lower DS portable gaming machine prices coupled with a strong Yen (86.5 percent of its sales were outside of Japan) helped pull Nintendo into the red. Regardless, Nintendo continues to forecast a full year net profit of ¥200 billion on revenue of ¥1.4 trillion. We’ll see.

Nintendo posts Q1 loss on strong Yen and lower DS prices originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 04:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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UK bans R4 cards, makes Nintendo DS pirating ‘double illegal’

While us Yankees are celebrating the one small victory for all that’s right and good represented by the recent DMCA jailbreak exception, things are looking a little bleaker for UK gadget-heads this afternoon. London’s High Court has ruled that R4 cards, which are used by homebrewers and the occasional no-goodnik game pirate to circumvent security on the Nintendo DS, cannot be sold, advertised, or imported into the UK. According to Joystiq, Nintendo claims they’ve seized over 100,000 R4 devices in the country since 2009. When asked for a comment, the Queen was all like, “What?”

UK bans R4 cards, makes Nintendo DS pirating ‘double illegal’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Jul 2010 14:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands On: Majescos Babysitting Mama for Wii

babysitting-mama-jeff.gif

PCMag’s software/Web staff editor Jeff Wilson and I recently got a preview of Majesco Entertainment‘s upcoming games lineup. We are happy to report that, among other new titles, the company is coming out with Babysitting Mama for Wii.

The simple, quirky, and  inordinately addictive Mama games, including several version of Cooking Mama as well as Gardening Mama, are already popular on the Nintendo DS and Wii. Babysitting Mama will add a new element, though: a plush “baby” that serves as your game controller. Actually, you stuff the Wiimote into Baby’s back, which just feels wrong, and then you’re ready to play.(That’s Jeff above, attempting to calm Baby down. He really liked this game, which demonstrates that the Mama demographic goes way beyond young girls.)

You’ll follow Mama on the screen to perform a number of baby-related activities ranging from the normal to the weird (our favorite was the baby race–you have to see it). As you play, you get feedback on how well or poorly you’re doing, both onscreen AND from Baby, who makes little happy and not-happy noises via the Wiimote.

The game should be out in October, in for the holidays. It’ll be $39.99 list, including the Baby.   Also coming for the holidays : Crafting Mama for the DS platform ($29.99 list). 

Rock Band 3 crashing into living rooms on October 26

Look, it’s summer break. What better to do than learn a little piano in preparation for the upcoming release of Harmonix’s Rock Band 3? The next installment — which promises to bring all sorts of new kit to the market — was finally given a release date today, and not surprisingly, it’ll be quickly climbing the Santa Lists of rug-rats the world over. According to the company, the title will ship on October 26th in North America, with the Wii, PS3 and Xbox 360 versions priced at $59.99 sans hardware and the DS rendition at $29.99. Hop on past the break if you’re interested in learning about your wealth of pre-order options.

Continue reading Rock Band 3 crashing into living rooms on October 26

Rock Band 3 crashing into living rooms on October 26 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Jul 2010 18:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Modded Game Gear becomes portable home for N64 (video)

It may or may not actually be the most compact Nintendo 64 we’ve ever seen, but even if it’s holding down the second spot, you can’t knock the ingenuity here. Crafted by one Evil Nod, the self-proclaimed N Gear 64 is little more than an N64 console tucked, shoved and crammed inside a Sega Game Gear enclosure. Best of all, the modder somehow stuffed an N64 controller in there too, yet still left all of the original markings for nostalgia’s sake. Head on past the jump for a video of it in action, or tap that source link to learn more about the build process. Riveting stuff, we tell ya.

[Thanks, Alon]

Continue reading Modded Game Gear becomes portable home for N64 (video)

Modded Game Gear becomes portable home for N64 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Jul 2010 06:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Xbox 360 sales increase 88 percent in June, give it US console crown for the month

Proving once again that in this world it’s more important what you look like than what you do, the Xbox 360 has cruised to the title of best-selling console in June on the back of a sexy physical redesign. The latest numbers from NPD show that Microsoft shifted 451,700 units in the US, which ousts the Wii’s tally of 422,500 and comfortably dwarfs the PS3’s 304,800. Still, if Sony wants any consolation it need only look back to the results of its own console Slimmification last year — US sales were said to have tripled in the immediate aftermath of the new SKU’s release. So Microsoft might have a little bit of catching up to do yet, and let’s not forget that the king of all hardware sales remains the DS, which somehow managed to sell more than half a million devices in June, in spite of the whole world and its dog already owning one.

Xbox 360 sales increase 88 percent in June, give it US console crown for the month originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Jul 2010 01:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo unlikely to significantly alter 3DS design before release

In an interview from this year’s E3 that’s only just been published, Nintendo 3DS platform producer Hideo Konno says that the upcoming handheld is in its “final shape.” Reggie Fils-Aime, the company’s leading North American voice, has more recently told us that, au contraire, the E3 consoles are not the final design, though parsing the two into one coherent message would suggest that Nintendo’s just leaving itself room to make small changes if the need arises. Konno’s chat with Wired also touches on the 3DS’ screen size, with him suggesting the glasses-free stereoscopic effect could be taken all the way to the size of a TV but requires the user to be in a very precise position, which is what makes it unfeasible. Teased about potentially making a 3DS XL, the veteran game guru says Nintendo’s sticking with the current form factor for portability’s sake, but he clearly isn’t closing the door on the idea if and when 3DS sales begin to wane. There’s a lot more here, including discussion of the new handheld’s analog nub and MotionPlus-like gyro and accelerator combo, so why not show the source link some love?

Nintendo unlikely to significantly alter 3DS design before release originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Jul 2010 02:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nintendo’s Miyamoto says Miis could make the jump to the 3DS

Nintendo already dropped a hint that Miis could be heading to the 3DS by including some Mii-like characters in the Pilotwings demo at E3 last month, and Shigeru Miyamoto himself has now offered some further confirmation that Nintendo is at least looking at the possibility. Speaking with IGN this week, he says that it is “something that we’re definitely giving consideration to,” and that Nintendo wants to “continue to try to allow people to use their Miis on different Nintendo systems going forward.” While that’s not quite a complete confirmation, it definitely sounds like your Mii could be with you for a long time to come.

Nintendo’s Miyamoto says Miis could make the jump to the 3DS originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Jul 2010 16:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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