Nintendo's $300 Wii U goes on sale November 18 in U.S
NEW
 YORK/TOKYO (Reuters) - Nintendo Co's Wii U will hit U.S. store shelves 
November 18 starting at just under $300, as the creator of Super Mario 
looks to regain the lead in gaming from Sony and Microsoft, and fend off
 tablet and smartphone makers led by Apple Inc.
The new
 version of the console that took the industry by storm six years ago 
comes with a built-in DVR that will allow users to watch and record live
 television like a cable set-top box.
It will go on sale in Japan on December 8 for about $340 (26,250 yen).
Executives
 have said it will stream video from Netflix Inc, Amazon.com Inc, Google
 Inc's YouTube, and Hulu. It will also come with touch-screen 
controllers - helping to push its price tag above rival consoles.
Nintendo
 is fielding the successor to the Wii in the busy year-end holiday 
shopping season, going up against Sony's PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's 
Xbox 360. They start at $250 and $200, respectively.
The
 original Wii became the world's biggest selling home console shortly 
after its 2006 launch, with motion-controlled gaming and a slew of 
software titles that appealed to users beyond traditional gamers.
What
 became a 100 million-machine bonanza for Nintendo is waning. In the 
three months to June 30, sales of its Wii more than halved to 710,000 
from 1.56 million a year earlier.
Supporting two 
"GamePad" controllers designed to look and function like tablets, the 
first new console from Nintendo in six years will come with a gamer's 
social network function called "Miiverse." It will be its first machine 
in 16 years to launch with a dedicated "Super Mario" game title.
In
 addition to the basic 8 gigabyte model costing $299.99, Nintendo will 
sell a "deluxe" 32 GB version for $349.99 in the United States and 
31,500 yen in Japan.
APPLE CHALLENGE
Repeating
 the Wii's success, however, will be tough as Nintendo battles not only 
with Microsoft and Sony, but tackles tablet and smartphone makers led by
 Apple that are eating into the $78 billion gaming market.
Apple
 on Wednesday revealed its latest iPhone with a bigger screen, better 
definition and a wireless function that allows users to view their 
smartphone images and games on TVs equipped with an Apple TV receiver.
For
 now, Nintendo, which began in 1889 making playing cards in the back 
streets of Kyoto, has a big enough cash pile built up during the Wii 
boom -- about $14 billion -- to stick with its hardware strategy.
However,
 if the Wii U fails to win over gamers amid a flood of tablets and 
smartphones, it may, analysts say, have to consider leveraging its 
software assets by letting Super Mario roam across devices built by 
other companies.
The console, unveiled in June, is 
available in black and white and has a 6.2-inch touch screen that 
includes a stylus. The GamePad controller has traditional buttons with 
left and right analog sticks.
Nintendo has said 23 new 
Wii U titles, including Nintendo Land, are in development. Third-party 
titles include Mass Effect 3 from Electronic Arts, Darksiders II from 
THQ and Ubisoft's exclusive Wii U title Zombi.
($1 = 77.8700 Japanese yen)
(Reporting by Tim Kelly in Tokyo and Nayak Malathi in New York; Editing by Michael Watson and Maureen Bavdek)
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
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