57
edits
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
The Nintendo DS is the successor of the {{bp|Game Boy Advance}} set of gaming systems, first released in 2004. Its notable feature is its pair of screens, one of which is a touch-sensitive. Two years after its launch, the {{bp|Nintendo DS Lite}}, a slightly smaller version of the original DS, started to be sold. The {{bp|Nintendo DSi}} soon followed in 2008. While this system is no longer capable of playing the Game Boy Advance games, it does allow players to download games via {{bp|Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection}}, among other new features. In late 2009, a bigger DSi, the {{bp|Nintendo DSi XL}} (known as the "Nintendo DSi | The Nintendo DS is the successor of the {{bp|Game Boy Advance}} set of gaming systems, first released in 2004. Its notable feature is its pair of screens, one of which is a touch-sensitive. Two years after its launch, the {{bp|Nintendo DS Lite}}, a slightly smaller version of the original DS, started to be sold. The {{bp|Nintendo DSi}} soon followed in 2008. While this system is no longer capable of playing the Game Boy Advance games, it does allow players to download games via {{bp|Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection}}, among other new features. In late 2009, a bigger DSi, the {{bp|Nintendo DSi XL}} (known as the "Nintendo DSi LL" in Japan) was released. | ||
==Information== | ==Information== | ||
* [http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/pdf/2010/100323.pdf Press release] (Japanese) | * [http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/pdf/2010/100323.pdf Press release] (Japanese) | ||
** [http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/pdf/2010/100323e.pdf English translation] | ** [http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/pdf/2010/100323e.pdf English translation] |
edits