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Final Wii specs lack DVD playback < Back  
Oct-1-06 05:10 PM  skinnymills   tags: Nintendo Wii
Nintendo confirms final version of its next-gen console will only play "12-centimeter optical discs for the Wii console," and it has abandoned original plans for DVD peripheral. Complete spec sheet inside.
By Tor Thorsen, GameSpot
Posted Sep 14, 2006 3:28 pm PT

At E3 2005, Nintendo showed off its next-generation console, then code-named "Revolution." Besides being the successor to the GameCube, the machine was to be the first Nintendo console to offer the potential for DVD playback. (Note: Panasonic did make a DVD-playing GameCube known as the Q for sale in Asia.)

Games for the Revolution, which has since been rechristened the Wii, would come on discs the same size as DVDs, and not the smaller, proprietary-format discs used by the GameCube. So when the console was first announced, Nintendo said that the console was capable of playing DVD movies, although it would require an "attachment" to do so.

The possible inclusion of DVD support was a major change of course for Nintendo, which had previously derided attempts by rivals Microsoft and Sony to bill their consoles as online-enabled multimedia devices. But when Nintendo announced a whole host of functions for its next-gen device today, many industry-watchers felt the company had finally embraced the concept of a console being used for forms of entertainment other than games.

Then, a funny thing happened. Nintendo released the final specs for the Wii--and nowhere did it mention anything about DVDs. In fact, the company described the console's disc drive as: "A single self-loading media bay will play single- or double-layered 12-centimeter optical discs for the Wii console, as well as 8-centimeter Nintendo GameCube discs."

The omission of any mention of DVDs led some to believe that Nintendo had decided to abandon any attempt to have the Wii support DVD playback. As it turns out, those skeptics were right. Today, Nintendo confirmed to GameSpot that the Wii will have no DVD playback and will not have an option for a DVD dongle or add-on in its current form.

"They were originally considering an external [DVD] attachment," a rep for the company said of the Wii's designers. "But because the price of DVD players has dropped so much and they have become so commonplace, Nintendo saw no need to create extra hardware options that would drive up the cost for consumers."

That said, other than the multimedia features, the Wii remains largely the same as before. It will still sport four GameCube controller ports, two GameCube memory-card slots, two USB 2.0 ports, and an SD Card slot. Its IEEE802.11 Wi-Fi capability will let it communicate wirelessly with the DS handheld or the Internet, and it still doesn't have high-definition video output, though it will support component and S-Video output.

A complete rundown of the Wii's technical specifications--quoted directly from Nintendo--is below:

WII Launch Date and MSRP: Nov. 19, 2006, in the Americas at an MSRP of $249.99.

 

 
This blog's link: http://www.kaneva.com/blog/3529.blog
Comment from: eevans Oct-2-06 11:46 PM    
Yeah, the DVD/CD playback omission is kinda a bummer. I'm much more interested in the system's primary function though. I think the Wii is going to be wildly successful. BTW, nice site.



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