TOKYO (AP) — The newest version of Nintendo’s popular handhold game console, with its large screen that’s easier on the eyes and bigger stylus similar to an ordinary pen, has led some to assume it is intended to lure older gamers.
But the company’s president said Friday the new Nintendo DS is designed to let small groups gather around a single device, watching and participating in game play. This would be a dramatic change — gaming on portable consoles, a popular category that also includes the rival PlayStation Portable from Sony, has until now been a private affair.
“It is bigger and about 100 grams heavier, so it is a little less convenient to carry around, but in exchange we hope it is accepted as a DS that is left on the kitchen table, which is bought for each household and shared among the family,” said company President Satoru Iwata.
The new Nintendo DS, called the “LL” for its size, is to go on sale in Japan from Nov. 21 at a suggested price of 20,000 yen ($220). It also has larger dual screens that can be seen clearly from sideways as well as straight on, encouraging group play.
If successful Iwata said it could help open up a new market for handheld consoles.
Nintendo could use a boost.
The console was announced Thursday, the same day the company said its first-half fiscal profit plunged and forecast annual earnings would fall for the first time in six years.
The well-known maker of Super Mario and Pokemon games has suffered as sales of its Wii set-top console have fallen. The Wii, with an innovative wandlike controller that senses motion, has been a smash hit since its 2006 debut, selling 56.14 million units around the globe.
But sales have fallen recently, and Nintendo has cut prices ahead of the upcoming holiday season.
Iwata said the company’s profits were also hurt by the stronger yen, and that a partial recovery was possible during the holiday season as higher demand spurred by the Wii price reduction kicks in. Nintendo’s consoles have been more popular gifts than rivals’ because of their family-oriented nature and low prices.
Iwata spoke to reporters and analysts at a briefing in central Tokyo.
When asked about other popular portable devices such as Apple’s iPhone and Amazon’s Kindle electric book reader, he said he was “more interested” in the Kindle because it has a pay-as-you-go business model as opposed to a monthly fee. Iwata said that such a business model was one possibility for future Nintendo devices as well.
Business
<img src=" http://www.joplinglobeonline.com/images/zope/friday.gif" border=0> New portable Nintendo DS console meant for groups
- Business
-
-
Stocks fall on Wall Street as Spanish bank teeters
Another flare-up in Europe’s debt crisis knocked U.S. markets lower Friday. This time, it was more trouble at a major Spanish bank.
-
5 Spanish banks downgraded; Bankia seeks 19 billion euros in aid
The outlook for the Spanish banking system worsened sharply Friday when Standard & Poor’s slashed the credit ratings of five banks and said the country is headed into a double-dip recession.
-
Europe debt crisis dragging world economies down
The Eurozone debt crisis is intensifying a global slowdown, with new signs that even powerhouse Germany may be faltering, adding to worries about China and other major pillars of economic growth.
-
US declines to label China a currency manipulator
The Obama administration may be getting tougher with China on trade, but its approach in dealing with Beijing on the thorny currency issue remains patient diplomacy.
-
Facebook ads less than lucrative for many businesses
As the public joined the frenzy around Facebook Inc.’s Wall Street debut, well-connected institutional investors were hearing a more sobering message: The social network’s main business, advertising, was sputtering.
-
New Orleans Times-Picayune cuts paper publication to 3 days a week
The New Orleans Times-Picayune will move to a three-day-a-week print schedule in the fall, becoming the largest metropolitan newspaper to cut back paper publication in what has increasingly become an electronic world of information.
-
Ad-skipping device at heart of legal battle between Fox, Dish
Fox Broadcasting Co. has sued Dish Network, becoming the first television network to fire a legal salvo over the satellite company’s controversial new ad-skipping device called AutoHop.
-
Syngenta pays $105 million to settle US litigation
Swiss chemicals maker Syngenta says it is offering $105 million to settle a U.S. lawsuit over one of its herbicides entering water supplies.
-
Some electric vehicle owners find savings on insurance
Early adopters of electric vehicles have to dig deep into their wallets to make the purchase, but some are reaping unexpected savings on their insurance bills.
-
’Personal concierge’ businesses take on to-do lists of the time-starved
Andrea Maida got the panicked phone call early one morning.
- More Business Headlines
-


