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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, May 12, 2006

Nintendo hopes Wii will woo nongamers

By Matt Slagle
Associated Press

Nintendo President Satoru Iwata, at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles yesterday, said his company's Wii console will be impressive with unique game play rather than flashy graphics.

RIC FRANCIS | Associated Press

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LOS ANGELES — The latest round in the video game console wars appears to be a race among Sony Corp., Nintendo Co. and Microsoft Corp. for the flashiest, most powerful system.

But that's not how Nintendo President Satoru Iwata sees it.

While Microsoft and Sony have wooed gamers with speedy processors and high-definition graphics on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, Iwata said Nintendo's Wii console is trying to address a more pressing concern: luring more nongamers into the fold.

"The approach to make more gorgeous-looking graphics ... to have the horsepower, to have much faster processing — they don't do anything to ask nongamers to play with a video game," Iwata said through a translator.

Ever since the Wii console was announced last year under the codename Revolution, company officials have pushed the system's nonconformist ways and declined to talk much about any high-tech specs.

And while Microsoft and Sony have divulged pricing and availability details, Nintendo has yet to say anything about cost or set an exact launch date, except that it will be available sometime in the fourth quarter of this year.

At the center of the company's vision is the Wii's TV-remote style input device, which can be swung around to mimic a baseball bat or pulled back and aimed like a bow and arrow. A palm-sized attachment, which plugs into the end of the controller, adds two-handed capabilities for games like "Super Mario Galaxy."

Though the Wii will play traditional DVDs with an add-on accessory, it lacks features like Blu-ray or HD-DVD drives for high-definition movies or startlingly realistic graphics.

Still, the Wii has been a huge draw at this week's Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles.

As the show opened each morning, a stampede of attendees sprinted to Nintendo's booth to get first dibs on Wii games such as the off-road racer "Excite Truck" and "Wii Sports."

"Nintendo's mission is to try to make people happy, to try to make people smile," Iwata said.

As for the name Wii (pronounced "we"), Iwata said:

"We wanted people to remember the name as soon as they heard it," he said.