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wraggster
September 14th, 2006, 22:00
The Wii will be region-free, or at least it should be.

That's the word from Wired News' Joel Johnson, who found Nintendo's VP of marketing Perrin Kaplan at the recent New York City press event and got her to reveal that, like the Nintendo DS, Nintendo's Wii games will work on any console regardless of region.

While there may be a region lock that third-party publishers can choose to turn on, Nintendo seems to be setting the standard by making its own first-party games region free.

Here's what Joel filed this morning:

Wired had the opportunity to sit down after with Nintendo Vice-President of Marketing & Corporate Affairs—not to mention affable conference host—Perrin Kaplan to ask a few questions that weren't addressed in the press conference.

• Will the Wii be region-free? Yes. Like the Nintendo DS, the Wii will be able to play games from other regions, such as Japan, without any restriction. Kaplan implied there might be a region lock that publishers would be able to flip on, but it doesn't sound like the first-party titles from Nintendo will be restricted.

• Will games downloaded from the Virtual Console store be tied to an account like Xbox Live or a one-time-only download like iTunes? Tied to an account. Kaplan discussed a scenario where a player's Wii was broken or destroyed, but would be able to re-download titles they had previously bought to a new Wii machine. Because my left leg was burning from an accidental Zippo oil spill, I neglected to ask if a user would be able to log into friends' Wiis and play their Virtual Console downloads away from their home machine.

• Will Wii users be able to add storage via USB hard drives? No. The Wii's storage will be exclusively via flash memory storage, such as SD memory cards, at least at launch. Kaplan said a hard drive addition could be in the future, but that sounds more like a "Sure, why not?" response than one based in any immediate plans.

• How much will Opera cost? Unknown. No price has yet been set for the download-able Opera web browser, but it sounds like it could very well be free, once Nintendo finishes discussions with Opera.

The big news from the press conference, besides the price—$250 for the console with one controller and Wii Sports bundled, $40 for additional Wii Remotes and $20 for additional Wii Nunchucks—was the showing of "Wii Channels," an instant-on interface where Wii players will be able to create "Mii" (me) personal avatars that work in supported games; a Wii Shop where Virtual Console games can be purchased for "Wii Points"; and photo, movie, and web browsing.

It's a slick little interface, but I continue to question whether users will want to sit in front of a television browsing the web without a keyboard, especially at non-HDTV resolutions. I guess we'll see when the Wii launches in the Americas on November 19th.

gotmilk0112
September 14th, 2006, 22:08
Sweet! 8)

JKKDARK
September 14th, 2006, 23:20
yeah, I wish :)

Video_freak
September 15th, 2006, 01:07
If they do keep it region free, then congratulations Nintendo for not following the crowd (again) and making money because of that (again). :)

CrackA
September 15th, 2006, 11:09
yeh, i think it is gonna be. i dont really care but lots of pple do for some reason.

Uruz 6
September 15th, 2006, 11:39
That's good news for us European guys;
You see, usually we get 25% of japanese games (talking about my ps2 experience, I know it's a little different for other systems), so to be able to play american games WITHOUT modding the thingy is nice.

razorak
September 15th, 2006, 11:41
Region free is the way to go for a global market

Jenksie
September 15th, 2006, 17:13
Also removes some of the arguments for chipping consoles. Some people genuinely have consoles modified to play imports, not counterfeit titles. One less argument that the console chippers can use to justify their existence.