Rule #1 about consumer electronics: The smaller it is, the more expensive it is. You're a fool if you think you're going to be paying less than $50 for this thing. Don't be stunned if it comes out for something like $80 or more.
I want one because it would be the perfect compliment for my Play-Yan, and because I don't have a GBA other than my DS and miss the GBA multiplayer stuff. However, I don't want to pay anything more than $60 for it.
Speaking of the Play-Yan, Nintendo would be foolish not to release it along side the Micro. It would turn it into an MP3 player around the size of the iPod mini, and even though SD cards aren't near the capacities of the iPod microdrives, iPods can't play video, so you would gain that despite the lack of space.
From what I've heard from the people I've talked to, the size of the screen isn't a problem at all. The resolution is there, and games look awesome on it because the pixels are packed much tighter together. No one there had troubles reading text, either.
So remember kiddies, just like you say to your girlfriends, it's not the size that counts, but how you use it.
I want one because it would be the perfect compliment for my Play-Yan, and because I don't have a GBA other than my DS and miss the GBA multiplayer stuff. However, I don't want to pay anything more than $60 for it.
Speaking of the Play-Yan, Nintendo would be foolish not to release it along side the Micro. It would turn it into an MP3 player around the size of the iPod mini, and even though SD cards aren't near the capacities of the iPod microdrives, iPods can't play video, so you would gain that despite the lack of space.
From what I've heard from the people I've talked to, the size of the screen isn't a problem at all. The resolution is there, and games look awesome on it because the pixels are packed much tighter together. No one there had troubles reading text, either.
So remember kiddies, just like you say to your girlfriends, it's not the size that counts, but how you use it.