Wii Are Successful!

After just over twelve hours in line at Target in the bitter cold of Plano, Texas, I have managed to score a Nintendo Wii. I honestly haven't put in much time with the machine yet, as I spent most of Sunday sleeping, but here's some quick thoughts. I'm not going to go into too much detail, as I'm tired and need to sleep.

I am very impressed with the machine itself. It's compact, quiet, and unassuming. The simple design is very attractive, and wouldn't have trouble looking at home anywhere. The Wii Menu (as Nintendo refers to the Wii's equivalent of a dashboard) is very much serviceable, though I still feel Nintendo is a bit overprotective when it comes to online settings. You have to jump through a few hoops to get things done online, and several of the online features have yet to be implemented, such as the Opera browser and weather updates.

The remote, of course, is going to be what garners the most reactions from new players, and so far it has been wonderful to use. While I'm not certain that it's quite as accurate and functional as Nintendo had hoped, I'm also not certain that I care. It's fun, period. My only gripe is that it's not quite as comfortable as it could be — while the Nunchuk is lightweight and contoured for comfort, the remote is on the heavy side (though it's not going to break any arms) and lacks said contours. These are minor things, however, as the overall experience has been very positive.

As for games, I picked up Zelda (along with everyone else), Excite Truck, and Rayman - Raving Rabbids. I have yet to crack open Excite Truck, so I can't say much there. I'm finding that the reviews are spot on for Zelda — the beginning of the game is very, very slow, and I'm not feeling an overwhelming urge to jump back in. From what I understand, I just need to work past the beginning and then it will pick up. I sure hope so...

Rayman, however, is surprisingly fun. The Wii version of the game is a collection of minigames in the same vein as the Wario Ware series of games, but more involved. The game has an excellent sense of humor and makes creative use of the controllers. There appears to be a large variety of games to unlock, so this one should keep you busy for some time.

Was there anything I didn't like? Just one, really: I was expecting the games on the Virtual Console to be a bit cheaper than they are. Anyone expecting to pay significantly less than the prices on Xbox Live Arcade will be somewhat disappointed. The pricing that you can expect is $5 for a game from the NES era, $8 for a game from the SNES era (includes Genesis and most likely TG16), and $10 for N64 games. There are somewhere around a dozen games available for launch, but I've yet to try any of them. There are, of course, no demos — these are unmodified emulations of the original titles, unlike the games on XBLA — so you can't try before you buy.

Overall, though, I am quite satisfied with the purchase. I'm currently visiting the family in Texas for Thanksgiving (many thanks to my brother for camping out with me the same day that I arrived), so I'm very interested in seeing how the rest of them take to the new machine. I have a feeling that I can sell at least one of them on Wii Sports Bowling.

I've got a couple of pictures from Saturday night. I'll update this post with those when I get home.

Comments

Knuckles Dawson said:

I'm really enjoying my Wii as well, and have registered your Wii number as a friend. I think. I believe it has to be two way before our Mii's start mingling.

I got Zelda and Super Monkey Ball. And I'm also finding Twilight Princess to be a blast. I beat the first dungeon, which I found to be a lot of fun.

Let me know how your family reacts to the Wii.

Knuckles Dawson said:

Unfortunately, I've got other _obligations_ on the 360 that keep me from putting too much time into the Wii. So I maybe play it 3 times a week. But always enjoy it. In fact, the lack of pressure to play the Wii consistently, and that I can rent a game and not have to finish it to make my gamercard look "clean" is a breath of fresh air.

NinjaFish said:

I just registered your number. The Wii has done a good job of keeping me off of Xbox Live since I got it, so I haven't been checking my messages. There's a good chance that the random garbage that has wandered into my Mii Parade will walk over to yours, too. I'm interested in seeing how all of that works.

I plan to have a follow-up post sometime soon with reactions on all of the stuff now that I've had more than a week to play with it.

NinjaFish said:

It's weird, because I feel exactly the opposite about achievements. I miss them on the Wii now that I've had them for so long on the 360. They've always made me play my games just a little bit longer than I would have without them. I've completed (not 1000/1000, but at least finished the single-player mode) more games on the 360 than any other console I've owned.

Also, I've enabled simple HTML in comments, just for you.