The Wii is a home video game console developed and marketed by Nintendo.
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The Wii is a home video game console developed and marketed by Nintendo.
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The primary controller for the Wii is the Wii Remote, a wireless controller with both motion sensing and traditional controls which can be used as a pointing device towards the television screen or for gesture recognition.
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The Wii was Nintendo's first home console to directly support Internet connectivity, supporting both online games and for digital distribution of games and media applications through the Wii Shop Channel.
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Later in its lifecycle, two lower-cost Wii models were produced: a revised model with the same design as the original Wii but removed the GameCube compatibility features and the Wii Mini, a compact, budget redesign of the Wii which further removed features including online connectivity and SD card storage.
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The Wii was extremely popular at launch, causing the system to be in short supply in some markets.
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Total lifetime sales of the Wii had reached over 101 million units, making it Nintendo's best-selling home console until it was surpassed by the Nintendo Switch in 2021.
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The Wii repositioned Nintendo as a key player in the video game console marketplace.
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The introduction of motion-controlled games via the Wii Remote led both Microsoft and Sony to develop their own competing products—the Kinect and PlayStation Move, respectively.
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Nintendo found that, while the Wii had broadened the demographics that they wanted, the core gamer audience had shunned the Wii.
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The Wii thought that video gaming had become too exclusive and wanted Nintendo to pursue gaming hardware and software that would appeal to all demographics.
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The Wii was made available for a press demonstration at E3 2006.
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The Wii reads games from an optical media drive located in the front of the device.
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The pack-in game Wii Sports includes a ten-pin bowling game that had the player hold the Wii Remote and perform a delivery of a ball; the Wii Remote could account for the player's position relative to the Sensor Bar, and their arm and wrist rotation to apply speed and spin to the virtual ball's delivery on screen.
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The Wii Remote includes an internal speaker and a rumble pack that can be triggered by a game to provide feedback directly to the player's hand.
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The Wii Fit offers a number of different exercise modes which monitored the player's position on the board, as well as exercise gamification, as to encourage players to exercise daily.
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The use of motion controls in the Wii served part of this, but Nintendo developed additional accessories to give awareness of one's health as a lead-in for the company to break into the health care field.
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Some copies of Mario Kart Wii shipped with the Wii Wheel, a plastic steering wheel frame with the Wii Remote could be inserted into, so that players could steer more effectively in game.
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The Wii Mini is a smaller, redesigned The Wii with a top-loading disc drive.
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The Wii Mini is styled in matte black with a red border, and includes a red Wii Remote Plus and Nunchuk.
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The Canadian and European releases did not include a game, while Mario Kart The Wii had been included in all launch bundles in the United States.
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Each player on a The Wii console was encouraged to create their own Mii via the Mii Channel to be used in games like The Wii Sports and some of the system software like the Mii Channel.
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The Wii includes a system that records the playtime based on any game or app on the system.
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New The Wii games included those from Nintendo's flagship franchises such as The Legend of Zelda, Super Mario, Pokemon, and Metroid.
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Original launch The Wii consoles are backward-compatible with all Nintendo GameCube software, Nintendo GameCube Memory Cards and controllers, although Korean The Wii consoles are not backwards compatible at all.
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The service allowed players to purchase games digitally through the Wii Shop, downloading the games to their local memory cards to be run from them.
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IGN and The Guardian named the Wii the 10th greatest video game console of all time out of 25, and GameSpot chose the console as having the best hardware in its "Best and Worst 2006" awards.
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The Wii was praised for its simple yet responsive controls, as well as its simplicity that appeals to broader audiences.
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UK-based developer Free Radical Design stated that the Wii hardware lacks the power necessary to run the software it scheduled for release on other seventh-generation consoles.
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Online connectivity of the Wii was criticized; Matt Casamassina of IGN compared it to the "entirely unintuitive" service provided for the Nintendo DS.
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The Wii's success caught third-party developers by surprise due to constraints of the hardware's distinct limitations; this led to apologies for the quality of their early games.
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The Nikkei Business Daily, a Japanese newspaper, claimed that companies were too nervous to start or continue making games for the console, some of which considering the Wii to be a fad that will eventually die down in popularity.
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In 2010, sales of the Wii began to decline, falling by 21 percent from the previous year.
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Wii sales weakened into 2011 as third-party support for the console waned; major publishers were passing over the Wii which was underpowered and used non-standard development tools, and instead focused on games for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and personal computers.
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The Wii sales continued to decline into 2012, falling by half from the previous year.
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The Wii surpassed 100 million units sold worldwide during the second quarter of 2013.
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The popularity of Wii Sports was considered part of the console's success, making it a killer app for the Wii as it drew those that typically did not play video games to the system.
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Nintendo had recognized that the Wii had generally been shunned by the core gaming audience as it was perceived more as a casual gaming experience.
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The Wii U was aimed to draw the core audience back in with more advanced features atop the basic Wii technology.
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The Wii has since become seen as a prime example of an effective blue ocean approach.
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Further, Nintendo's first-party games for the Wii were set at an retail price of, about less expensive than average games for Nintendo's competitors.
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Iwata stated they were able to keep the game price lower since the Wii was not as focused on high-resolution graphics in comparison to the other consoles, thus keeping development costs lower, averaging about per game compared to required for developing on the Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3.
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The Wii was marketed to promote a healthy lifestyle via physical activity.
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The Wii has become a popular target for homebrewing new functionality and video games since its discontinuation.
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The Wii can be hacked to enable an owner to use the console for activities unintended by the manufacturer.
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Music written for the Wii has taken on a new life as a cultural touchstone, and inspired people far beyond the confines of the little white wedge it was composed for.
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