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HD Wii By 2011?

1Up noticed an interesting post up at WhatTheyPlay which put together some public information with more from private sources suggesting that the next version of the Wii console is planned for 2011. Quoting: "Unlike previous console transitions from Nintendo, the new system will be presented as a true successor to the Wii, and is being dubbed by those that have seen the presentation as 'Wii HD.' There is no indication if this will be its eventual name, but the nature of the transition has been characterized as similar to 'the shift from Game Boy to Game Boy Advance,' where familiar, key elements were left intact while the core hardware was made more powerful. It is expected by all those that we have spoken to on the subject that the new device will retain the Wii name in part."

8 of 245 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Let me guess... by philspear · · Score: 3, Informative

    I like that one too, but "wii" isn't a japanese word. In fact, that's not even sound that's native to the language. At least, that's what I heard when it was announced. The last time I was in japan was when the DS was launching, does anyone know if they pronounce it the same over there? I don't know if that would be a difficult sound for them. I would guess they actually say "uii" or something that uses the U sound instead of the W.

    If you're wondering, to express happiness, the japanese do not say "wee!" they say "Yatta!"

  2. Re:Storage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    From TFA:
    High definition visuals are assured, as is a greater emphasis on digitally distributed and backwardly compatible content, indicating that the new system will feature some form of local storage medium such as a hard drive or large flash memory solution.

  3. Re:Storage? by _xeno_ · · Score: 4, Informative

    On that note, it'd be great if Nintendo would fix up their save-game system.

    I mean, seriously, save slots? Still? Sure, it made sense when using carts where there was a limited space tied to the cart. It kinda stopped making sense when you had memory cards and most certainly stopped making sense when the console has built-in storage.

    I'm assuming it's some Nintendo requirement because even third-party games will have a limited number of save slots stored on the Wii. Based on the memory browser, it looks like Wii games are allowed to say "I need this much space for saving" and then get a single chunk of space, which then gets divided into save slots. Which is ridiculous.

    While they're at it, poach the whole user profile thing that Sony has on the PS3. You can create multiple "users" on the console, and each "user" gets their own collection of save games. It's very nice to be able to share a console without worrying about accidentally overwriting someone else's save. I'd imagine the Xbox 360 has something similar (although I don't know).

    'Course, presumably this is possible to do on the Wii, although it might require a firmware update or something...

    --
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  4. Re:Storage? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ah, I see. See what I get for posting at 1:30 at night? :-P

    Honestly, that scheme is a usability feature, not a hardware limitation. Nintendo came up with unlimited saves scheme in the form of Miis, but games that don't bother to use Miis (even just for savegames!) obviously fall back on the classic system. Of course, my brain is a smidge fried here, but I believe some games do limit the number of Mii-saves as well. I think this is still a usability issue as Nintendo didn't want multiple save files hanging around for a single game.

  5. Re:Can we get HD early? by StarWreck · · Score: 3, Informative

    Have you tried buying the upgrade Component cable to get the full 480p out of the Wii? Or are you using the composite cable that came with the Wii? That only lets you get 480i.

    --
    ... and in the DRM, bind them.
  6. Re:Let me guess... by pizzach · · Score: 2, Informative

    Wii is what you get after two layers of lossy translation between character sets.
    English -> Katakana -> Romanization of katakana
    We -> (wa)(i[small])(-) -> Wii

    The Japanese do pronounce it "Wii". It's written that way because it's how the japanese people pronounce "we" and most closely fits how they think. It's not pronounced "Uii" because that would be a 3 syllable word instead of 2. Go study the Hepburn romanization system if you don't believe me.

    DS can be pronounced correctly in Japanese. It requires a special letter combination like "wi" does. The only people who might have a problem with it are old people.

    --
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  7. Re:This is news? How? by vux984 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Its the gamers who want something to buy beyond Zelda or Mario.

    meh, there's lots to play out there. Radiant Dawn, Mercury Meltdown, Zack&Wiki, Metroid3, Godfather, ...

    I dunno, there are easily 20+ games that are more than difficult enough to be a 'gamers' game. And there are several 'casual' titles that are worthy of play too, and then there's plenty to to be had on the Virtual Console/WiiWare. I just can't be that sympathetic; there is plenty of value there.

    And honestly, if you are consuming titles at such a high a rate that the Wii library is 'woefully inadequate', you've already got at least 1 of the other consoles in addition to the Wii, and possibly a DS or PSP to boot.

    If that is you, and you are still complaining about the lack of titles... then your expectations are out of whack, or you are skipping tons of good quality games... probably both.

  8. Re:Let me guess... by Goaway · · Score: 2, Informative

    Uhm. I hate to tell you this, but pretty much everything you just said is just plain wrong.

    http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wii lists the pronounciation as "(u)(small i)(-)", which would be romanized as "uii" in the informal waapuro romanization popular on the net (nobody uses Hepburn, because nobody knows how to type macrons).

    "(wa)(small i)(-)" is not a letter combination that is ever used except by people trying to be cute when spelling "wai".

    I don't even know what you mean by "DS can be pronounced correctly in Japanese.". It's prounced "(de)(small i)(-)(e)(su)", which certainly doesn't match the English pronounciation perfectly by any means.