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Nintendo plumbs big- name title to hype Wii U

- DERRIK J LANG

NINTENDO is relying on a famous plumber, zombies and a virtual theme park to build some buzz for the Wii U.

The Japanese gaming giant unleashed 23 games for its upcoming console featuring a touchscree­n controller during a news conference on Tuesday at the Electronic Entertainm­ent Expo, the gaming industry’s annual trade show.

Among the titles announced were the co-operative platform game New Super Mario Bros U and the amusement-park-themed mini-game collection NintendoLa­nd. Nintendo also demonstrat­ed the fantastica­l strategy sequel Pikmin 3 and the first-person undead fighting game ZombiU from Ubisoft Entertainm­ent.

The titles used what the company is dubbing “asymmetric gameplay,” which gives players using the 15.75cm touchscree­n controller called the Wii U GamePad a different experience than those armed with traditiona­l Wii controller­s. The Wii U will be compatible with previous Wii controller­s, including the Wii Nunchuk and Wii Balance Board.

“When we launched the Wii at the press conference in 2006, people were still wondering what this thing is all about,” said Reggie Fils-Aime, president of Nintendo of America, after the press conference. “To make a comparison of where we are with the Wii U vs the Wii, I think we’re actually much further along. I say that because here we're able to show off over 20 games, and we’ve got fantastic third-party support.”

Nintendo illustrate­d that New Super Mario Bros U could be played on either a TV or the touchscree­n created Super Mario Bros and Legend of Zelda, said.

Other games announced for the successor to the Wii console included the fitness title Wii Fit U, a sing-anddance-along game called SiNG and the word-filled puzzler Scribblena­uts Unlimited from Warner Bros Interactiv­e Entertainm­ent.

Nintendo Co jumped ahead of rivals Microsoft Corp and Sony Corp to build hype at E3 by streaming an online video on Sunday revealing that the touchscree­n controller would be called the Wii U GamePad. The company also announced it would release a traditiona­l controller outfitted with two analogue sticks called the Wii U Pro Controller, and that the Wii U’s interface would be an online virtual hub called Miiverse.

Fils-Aime said Wii U users would be able to connect to the Miiverse, which is populated by cartoony Nintendo avatars called Miis, with internet-enabled smartphone­s, tablets and other devices.

Microsoft and Sony showed off similar second-screen capabiliti­es on Monday. Microsoft unveiled an app called Xbox SmartGlass that would allow users to stream and share content across their TVs, tablets and smartphone­s using the Xbox 360, while Sony continued to hype what it calls “cross-play” between its PlayStatio­n 3 console and PlayStatio­n Vita hand-held device.

No price or release date was announced for the Wii U system, which was unveiled last year at E3.

The tablet-like Wii U GamePad is equipped with an infrared transceive­r, gyroscope and accelerome­ter. It also has a camera, stylus, two analogue sticks and multiple buttons.

Fils-Aime said the Wii U console would work with two Wii U GamePads, but that feature was not demonstrat­ed on Tuesday.

Nintendo also previewed a trio of games for its 3DS handheld device starring its famous plumber siblings: New Super Mario Bros 2 introducin­g a golden Mario, Paper Mario: Sticker Star presenting a 2-D version of the protagonis­t in 3-D, and Luigi’s Mansion: Dark Moon focusing on Mario’s ghost-capturing brother.

After the news conference, people lined up at the Nintendo booth inside the Los Angeles Convention Center as they waited to try NintendoLa­nd, which features mini-games inspired by 12 Nintendo franchises, such as Legend of Zelda, Animal Crossing and Donkey Kong. – Sapa-AP

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