WIN a Nintendo Wii and game!(Features)
ALL this week we've teamed up with Birmingham's most stylish department store, Selfridges, to give you the chance to win fabulous gifts for Christmas. Today you could be in for a real treat and bag yourself a fantastic Nintendo Wii console with Mario Kart game. Wii is fresh, new and different - but
Publication: Birmingham Mail (England)
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Nintendo DS plays the phone card: it could cost about $100 more than Game Boy Advance, but it could double as free phone service device.(Video Games)(product launch by Nintendo Company Ltd.)
The portable Nintendo DS is expected to ship in the United States Nov. 21 at $179.99, according to analysts and retailers. Sources also indicated the price point could be as high as $199.99. With Nintendo announcing the price drop of its current Game Boy Advance (GBA) SP to $79.99, that gives the
Publication: Video Store
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Battle of the game titans. (Sony and Nintendo battle in video game industry)(Brief Article)
Move over Nintendo, Sony's back. For the past year, Nintendo 64 has been considered the market share leader in next-generation videogames. But new data and retail feedback suggest that the game landscape is changing, with PlayStation now in the lead. The two platforms have been running almost
Publication: HFN The Weekly Newspaper for the Home Furnishing Network
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Video games ride out the Nintendo wave; Nintendo's home system ebbs while Game Boy and 16-bit flow. (includes related article on hand-held video games)
Saturation. That's the buzz word on the lips of toy retailers who have experienced a lull in the sales of the Nintendo Entertainment System. Having sold over 28 million systems from 19861990, Nintendo has penetrated a third of U.S. households and 70 percent of households with children 8 to 15.
Publication: Playthings
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Nintendo wakes up: video games. (comeback by beleaguered video game company)
TOKYO AFTER a month in Japanese stores, Nintendo's new video-game player, the Nintendo 64, is still drawing crowds to gawk at its dazzling 3-D graphics. The crowds are good news for the Kyoto firm, which has slumped from its dizzying heights in the late 1980s, when it was making more money than all
Publication: The Economist (US)
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