TOKYO--With the vintage gaming trend still on the rise in Japan, Nintendo has unveiled the classically colored Famicom model of its Game Boy Micro, one of the five color models to be offered at the ...
Nintendo on Tuesday offered assembled media the first look at a prototype of their new Revolution console, due out in 2006. Details were scarce, however – Nintendo made no attempt to offer performance ...
As if the video game console battles surrounding the Microsoft Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Nintendo Revolution weren't enough, Nintendo on Tuesday released its new GameBoy Micro in Japan. Tiny by game ...
Nintendo fanboys, you may now rejoice. After four or so months since their E3 debut, Nintendo has finally released the miniature successor to its Gameboy line in Japan. The Gameboy Micro, so small ...
LOS ANGELES, May 17, 2005 - The original Game Boy ® Advance fits comfortably into the pocket of a backpack. The retooled Game Boy ® Advance SP fits into a coat pocket. Now Nintendo takes aim at the ...
Nintendo Co. Ltd. launched its newest handheld gaming device, the GameBoy Micro, in Japan on Tuesday. The Micro is easily the smallest member of Nintendo’s hit GameBoy family, as its name suggests. At ...
Back in 2005, Nintendo released the Game Boy Micro, an even smaller version of the Game Boy Advance (smaller than the Game Boy Advance SP). While it was a short-lived line of products that marked the ...
ArsTechnica writer Jeff Smykil sent me an interesting little IM a few minutes ago, asking a question that hadn't even occured to me. Where are all the cool faceplates for the GameBoy Micro? It's a ...
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The Game Boy Micro - Nintendo's latest offering in the GB series and the smallest one to date - could be on European shelves in time for Christmas, according to a report on Spanish business site ...
Gaming innovator Nintendo Co. Ltd. reported today that Cypress Semiconductor’s programmable system-on-chip (PSoC) mixed-signal array is being used in its new Game Boy Micro portable game system.
An anonymous tipster, who shall remain anonymous [Thanks, Frank!] tipped us with this little gem: Before the DS came out, Nintendo was actually working on a WiFi adaptor for the Gameboy Advance (which ...
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