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Nintendo DS

Nintendo DS

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From: Nintendo of America
Category: Video Games

List Price: $129.99
Buy Used: $88.85
You Save: $41.14 (32%)



Used (4) from $88.85

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 1027 reviews
Sales Rank: 7129

Platform: Nintendo Ds
Media: Video Game
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Operating System: Nintendo DS
Modem: None
Display Size: 3
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8 x 4.9 x 2.1

MPN: ntr s vkba
Model: 45496716141
UPC: 045496716141
EAN: 0045496716141
ASIN: B00064MUIA

Release Date: June 15, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Dual Screens open up new possibilities - use the touch screen as an inventory reference for role-playing games, to view maps for your favorite strategy game, or see racing action from two perspectives at once
  • Navigate menus or access inventory items simply by touching the screen with stylus or fingertip; tough film over touchscreen protects it
  • Advanced 3D graphics engine and 16-channel audio, for graphics and sound that are superior to other portable game systems
  • All-new PictoChat feature allows DS users to write messages with an on-screen keyboard or the stylus and send them wirelessly
  • Built-in microphone port for voice control of games, or for voice chat with other DS players

Accessories:

  • Safe Screen
  • Action Replay GBA/DS
  • Nintendo DS AC Adapter
  • Electronic Gaming Monthly
  • Play

Similar Items:

  • Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day!
  • Big Brain Academy
  • New Super Mario Bros.
  • Pokemon Diamond
  • Pokemon Pearl

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
In a surprising number of ways, the Nintendo DS is quite unlike any video game system that's come before. First, there's the two screens, one above and one below. The idea might seem like a gimmick -- the screens are far enough apart that you won't be able to see them as one long screen -- but the format works in a complementary way. Depending on the game, the DS serves action in one screen and details, maps, stats, or alternate views in the other. Switching your eyes between screens takes a little getting used to, but quickly becomes automatic, like checking a rear-view mirror while driving. Both screens are back-lit and a little larger than that of the Game Boy Advance SP, so they'll be easy to see in most conditions.

Nintendo DS used with a stylus
Players can control games using the touch-sensitive bottom screen of the DS.
The bottom screen also functions as a PDA-style touchpad. It comes with a small stylus, as well as a stylus that attaches to your thumb. This touch screen might be both the best and worst feature of the DS. One one hand, it brings the freedom of PC-style mouse control into gaming, but using it also tends to block what's going on in that screen. For example, while playing the Metroid Prime: Hunters, you could use the left thumb pad to move, the left shoulder button to fire, and the touch screen to look and jump. As you track foes on the bottom-screen map, however, your view will be partially obscured by your own right thumb.

The good news is that Nintendo has stressed a lot of comfort options, both in the operating system and in their games. Want to play Metroid without the touch-pad? Select a different control scheme in the game's option menu, which also includes configurations for lefties. You can even customize your DS to automatically play the inserted title or to start with the main menu, choose which screen to display your GBA games, to add a nickname for wireless play, and more.

Nintendo DS used with a stylus
Up to 16 players can connect wirelessly within a 100-foot radius.
That's right, the DS is wireless-enabled. Say good-bye to that daisy-chain of network cables that was previously necessary for portable multiplayer gaming. Nintendo's proprietary wireless format has a radius rated at 30 to 100 feet depending on environmental interference with its signal. Surely, it's more than enough for friends to game from one end of the bus to the other. We experimented in a small, nearly empty parking lot and got great reception at the upper end of that rating. The DS network can handle up to 16 users, though you can expect the maximum number of players to vary from game to game.

Also, unlike all but the earliest video game systems, the DS comes with a built-in application. It's called PictoChat, and it allows people to write and draw pictures in a chat-room format. Since it's built in to the DS operating system, you'll always be able to interact with other DS users.

Nintendo DS used with a stylus
The built-in program PictoChat lets you write and draw with others.
But not all is new; Nintendo has re-invested some favorite features of older platforms into the DS. It's backward compatible to the Game Boy Advance, which means that older Game Boy and Game Boy Color games won't work in this machine but GBA games will run fine (sadly, the wireless feature doesn't extend to GBA games). Like the GBA SP, the DS is powered by a rechargeable lithium-ion battery that provides approximately 10 hours of play on a four-hour charge. Old timers might recognize the A/B/X/Y face buttons from the Super Nintendo controller, though they're not in the same positions. The standard headphone jack and wide-body comfort of the first GBA model is back, coupled this time with the SP's screen-saving clamshell design. In terms of its ability to display graphics and sound, the DS is a little better -- and a whole lot smaller -- than the Nintendo 64.

Overall, the Nintendo DS represents a rather large leap in portable gaming. With some mystery shrouding the future abilities of its internal microphone (voice recognition) and its IEEE 802.11 wireless network, the DS may have left some surprises up its sleeve. --Porter B. Hall

Pros:

  • Great design marries innovative new features with great features of old systems and lots of customizable options
  • Wireless up to 100 feet
  • Built-in PictoChat lets you write and draw pictures with up to 15 other DS users

Cons:

  • Sometimes hard to see and use the touch screen at the same time
  • Wireless multiplayer feature won't work with GBA games
  • Can't connect to other wireless devices...yet


Product Description
The Nintendo DS is going to transform the portable gaming world. It's a complete portable entertainment and communications unit that lets you see the game action from a new perspective. The two screens offer touchscreen control for a groundbreaking control style that sets it apart from other systems. Access items, move characters or navigate menus by touching a stylus to a screen. The built-in voice recognition lets you command your game by voice, while the wireless options let you send text messages, drawings and IMs. This combination of new gaming features and portable communications will shock and impress you. Comes with Rechargeable Battery Pack, AC Adapter, Stylus, Screen Cover, Wrist Strap and playable demo of Metroid Prime: Hunters - First Hunt. Create a local wireless network with up 16 players, with a 30-foot range 1GB of built-in memory for faster gaming and shorter load times Dual slots support both GBA and DS games


Customer Reviews:   Read 1022 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars GET A DS BECAUSE THEY ROCK!!!!!! ....or: the tale of two ds-es   July 17, 2007
the nintendo ds is an awesome game console. it plays games and allows you to chat with friends. it will play both ds games AND game boy advance games. i have a silver ds. i don't have a lite, but the original is a prize for me considering how much effort i put into getting one with a five dollar allowance. i would have got one with my own allowance, but instead, on christmas day a few years ago(i think two years) BEHOLD!!!!! A SHINY, BEAUTIFUL, SILVER NINTENDO DS EMERGED FROM THE CAMOFLAGE OF IT'S CHRISTMAS PAPER WRAPPINGS AND WAS MINE!!!! MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINE!!!!!! my saintly parents had bestown upon me the silver beauty that is the nintendo ds! and since then it has been a commonly used device. i play it all the time! and one year later, last christmas, an electric blue ds was bestown upon my little brother.... but that's another story.

i would also like to tell you about pictochat. you use the stylus to type or draw pictures. i also found you can drag and drop letters. just pick any letter, number, or symbol, tap it and hold onto it and drag it to where you want it. if you go to the system settings place you can choose
1. a color. whatever color you choose will be the color of your pictochat window.
2.a username. your name will show in the top left corner of your window and any messages you send.
3. a phrase. you can type in a phrase, and in pictochat you tap your name and the phrase will appear. at the top of your screen, your friends' names will appear. tap their names to see their phrases.

ds to ds pictochat has a very short range, as does all the ds to ds activities i've done on games like animal crossing (buy it) and nintendogs (also buy it). from that i know ds to ds is short range. i have never done wi-fi, but supposedly you can play with anyone around the globe.

anyway, there's a lot more good stuff to know but it would make my review really really long, so in conclusion...
GET A NINTENDO DS!!!!! (OR A LITE, IT REALLY DOESN'T MATTER TO ME!!!!!)



3 out of 5 stars Ridiculous clunky design   May 23, 2007
 0 out of 6 found this review helpful

It really didn't make any difference whether or not it was a capable console with fantastic games. The fact of the matter was I couldn't bring myself to spend 129+ USD on such an ugly thing. The casing looks outrageously cheap and is extremely poorly designed (the faces are not flush with eachother when the DS is shut). As for the specs, it's not too shabby. It's basically a SNES stuffed into a fairly small handheld console. Fairly small being a major flaw of design.
Nintendo has long been looking for every single way in which they could shrink their gameboy series. From the Gameboy, to the Gameboy color and from the Advance and from there to the SP and micro. For whatever reason, they felt that an unusual geometrical design which nearly rivaled the size of the original Gameboy would be suitable for their supposedly non-replacement for the Gameboy (which has not seen a successor up to this date).

The bulkiness alone strayed me from purchasing this system. If you're considering buying this for the 30 dollar savings (for a USED model), don't even think about it. I do not know a single person who plays the DS. I have not seen a DS in public for over a year. Simply put, the DS Lite is the only thing that one is willing to be seen with today. Anything else would be original sin. Unless you're a non-conformist to the extreme, don't waste your money on this block which looking back now looks like a false-start for the system just so that Nintendo could double their profits considering everyone that I knew owned the original ds has "upgraded" to a lite.



5 out of 5 stars nintendo revolutionizes next gen   May 12, 2007
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

Up to 6th-gen systems, it's been the standard button controller (which was great). Now, in 7-th, the ds has touch screen and the wii the controller, AND at a lower price than others. BUY A DS, and try these games (that I highly recommend):

1) MARIO KART DS

2) METROID PRIME HUNTERS

3) MARIO 64 DS

and or course, 4) BRAIN AGE

have fun all :)



5 out of 5 stars Toy for a long time   March 13, 2007
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

My kid uses the toy almost every day for 3 months already and she didn't tired of it yet. She is very happy teaching dogs to make new tricks and winning competitions. I don't regret spending money for Nintendo DS. It turns into one of the best presents I made to my child.


5 out of 5 stars Ah, the DS   October 17, 2006
 5 out of 10 found this review helpful

I can still remember that Christmas morning, when I was the happiest kid in the neighberhood, first taking out my sleek, shiny DS from the wrap of the box, all clean, shiny and new. I remember first turning it on and watching it light up, the intro screen making that sastisfying noise. Ah, the memories. It was probally the best expirence with a new console, even when I got my PSP on the very first day it came out. Surely, getting a new console is a joy.

Okay, so this thing may not be as good as the DS Lite. After all, after getting your hands on the DS Lite, it's hard going back to the first one. I remember playing it too, it was a joy, and the stylus worked great. Also, this was a highly anticipated system, second only to the PSP (those two months were HELL for me).

ANyway, the games for DS always were showing stregth. While the racing games arent' as good, the DS offers game that you can get nowhere else. IT has alot of killer exclusives, from Brain Age to Castlevania to a brand new Zelda game, to an updated 2-d scrolling classic. The DS's touch screen isn't a gimmick if you use it right. Sure, there may be bad racing games, but hey, all those quirky games give this system alot of life.

The DS sadly isn't my favorite handheld, b ut I give props to Nintendo for constantly pushing the envelope and giving us a one of a kind gaming expirence. The DS will go down in gaming history for sure. Bravo Nintendo!


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