Nintendo 3DS handheld games console (preview)
Nintendo's latest handheld will launch in Australia on March 31 for $350
When we got the chance to play around with the Nintendo 3DS at its Australian launch, we had mixed thoughts about its 3D capabilities. It's the most advanced and most well-rounded product Nintendo's released to date, though, and we're sure it will sell like hotcakes. Delicious hotcakes.
Pros
- We like the 3D slider, the 3D effect is fun and novel, it's a bit cheaper than we were expecting
Cons
- The 3D effect isn't always great and only works when you're viewing the 3DS from the right angle
Bottom Line
Nintendo's 3DS is a solid upgrade from the previous model, with more powerful processing and the intriguing novelty of glasses-free 3D gaming. Unless you're a portable gaming tragic we don't see a pressing reason to upgrade from your existing DS, but new buyers should be well served by the 3DS's evolution and expanded games library.
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Price
$ 349.00 (AUD)
Nintendo 3DS: Design
The Nintendo 3DS is a side-step of sorts from the massive-screened Nintendo DSi XL, but it's a definite upgrade from the slightly earlier DSi. The top screen is the only one that can show 3D — the bottom touchscreen quickly gets smudged with fingerprints, presumably sending your eyes crazy trying to work out 3D — and it's a whopping three and a half inches in size with a widescreen aspect ratio. This may seem small when it's up against a 60in 3D LED TV, but you're able to hold the 3DS right up to your face to see the 3D effects.
Otherwise, the Nintendo 3DS is functionally very similar to its predecessors. The two screen concept is surprisingly easy to grasp and the control layout is similar. There's a nifty new analog control stick — a hat-tip to the Nintendo 64 — which provides a much-needed degree of fine control to 3D games (we mean games with polygonal graphics, not the 3D effect), which we appreciated when playing a demo of Lego Star Wars III: The Clone Wars. There's also a 3D camera setup on the back which takes 640x480-pixel 3D pictures, but you can only view them on the 3DS's screen.
Nintendo 3DS: 3D and 3D games
We played the Nintendo 3DS at arm's length and found the 3D effect added a bit of extra immersion, and the effect got stronger the closer we looked. It's blurry and indistinct unless you're looking at it straight on though, which makes gaming with a couple of friends out of the question. The 3D slider is an excellent touch, allowing players to tailor the effect to their tastes.
After downing a beer or two at the console's Australian launch, we had no problems viewing the 3D at full blast — it didn't make us queasy, and the effect itself was perfectly visible. 3D is a bit of a risky business in the first place, and Nintendo has warned off children under six from playing in 3D, but we think the vast majority of users will find it a pleasant novelty — as long as they're viewing the screen straight-on.
Thirty 3D titles at launch gives Nintendo 3DS purchasers an impressive repertoire to choose from, and we're sure developers will jump aboard the bandwagon quickly. The novelty effect will likely be used to gimmicky effect in some titles, but any number of games is a welcome addition to the already stellar back catalogue of DS and Gameboy Advance games (via Download Play, since the 3DS doesn't have a GBA slot). Augmented reality games are another nice extra.
Nintendo 3DS: Price and conclusion
The Nintendo 3DS will be selling in Australia on March 31 for $349, although it's pegged at $20 cheaper in most stores already. We were expecting Nintendo to sell it for around $400, so the price is fine with us. Sure, you can get it cheaper if you buy it from the US, but you'll be waiting a few days for it to ship and you'll only be able to play games from the US region. To be honest, the high price of games concerns us more than the price of the console.
We think the Nintendo 3DS is a good product — it's an impressively well-rounded gaming device. Our main concern, the 3D effect, can be dialled back or switched off completely. We're keen to get our hands on one and put it through plenty of gruelling 3D gaming tests soon.
In other news, I want hotcakes.
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ethan
1
there are multiple mistakes in this article such as you will not be able to download gba games, only gb and gbc. and you can still play with friends by turning off the 3d effect with the depth slider and through wireless play. you can also put pictures taken with the outer cameras on the computer and view them, they just wont be in 3d.
next time check up on your facts to make sure they are accurate.
James Forward
2
"Nintendo's 3DS is a solid upgrade from the previous model, with more powerful processing and the intriguing novelty of glasses-free 3D gaming. Unless you're a portable gaming tragic we don't see a pressing reason to upgrade from your existing DS"
This article is, well, uninformed. It isn't a "new model" of the DS. It's the new generation. It's to DS what the GBA was to the GBC, or what the DS was to the GBA... It is the next main console. Not sure why you put that statement, frankly.
Phillip
3
To Ethan, What he wrote is in fact accurate for the most part. I'm not sure on the GBA compatiability but if you read in context he says you can't play with friends with 3D on. That part of the article is about the 3D, so anything written in that is in relation to the topic, basic sentence structure. Same with the camera, common sence dictates you can put them on the computer but won't be in 3D. It doesn't need to be explained, it's a given.
To James Forward, The 3DS is not next gen. It is exactly the same as DS but with bit more power and a joystick. There is no design change, no radical new innovations in way of graphics and gameplay or the way it's used. The only thing is an OPTIONAL 3D image on games designed for it. Nothing about it is next gen, just add ons to the previous model. That does not translate into the next gen.
mgonigal
4
@Phillip
It does contain brand new innovations. One is the 3d screen hinted at in the name, 3DS. It has extremely improved wireless capabilities and social networking capabilities. It has a gyroscope, motion sensing, an anolog stick, increased processing. The only reason it has DS in the name is the fact that it has dual screens, apart from that, everything indicates that is a next-generation handheld console. If the Gameboy Advance is considered the next-generation console to the Gameboy Colour, and all it did was increase power and screen size, I don't see why the 3DS can't be considered next-generation. To be honest, I think you are a bit of a contrarian; you seem to disagree with everyone here...