Nintendo Press said:WII-KLY UPDATE: TWO WIIWARE GAMES AND TWO VIRTUAL CONSOLE GAMES ADDED TO WII SHOP CHANNEL
Nov. 17, 2008
The ever-growing library of games on the Wii™ Shop Channel truly offers something for every gaming occasion, as seen in this week's new additions. Want to settle in for a few single-player laughs? Check out the latest hilarious Strong Bad adventure. Socializing with friends? Target Toss Pro: Bags lets you play with as many as 15 of your pals. Gathering with family? Even your grandparents can enjoy the arcade classic SPACE INVADERS®. And the side-scrolling action of FORGOTTEN WORLDS™ provides a wickedly fun diversion for solo gamers and fantasy-loving groups alike.
Nintendo adds new and classic games to the Wii Shop Channel at 9 a.m. Pacific time every Monday. Wii owners with a broadband Internet connection can redeem Wii Points™ to download the games. Wii Points can be purchased in the Wii Shop Channel or at retail outlets. This week's new games are:
WiiWare™
Strong Bad Episode 4: Dangeresque 3 (Telltale Games, 1 player, Rated E10+ for Everyone 10 and Older – Alcohol and Tobacco Reference, Crude Humor, Mild Cartoon Violence, 1,000 Wii Points): Move over, generically buff action heroes. Strong Bad is here to show you how it's done in his hand-crafted cinematic masterpiece, Dangeresque 3: The Criminal Projective. You play Dangeresque, a dirty cop in pursuit of a little action and several big sacks of cash. Can our hero stay alive long enough to defeat his arch-nemesis, save the world and get the girl? Looks like he's gonna have to jump.
Target Toss Pro: Bags (Incredible Technologies, 1-16 players, Rated E for Everyone, 700 Wii Points): Target Toss Pro: Bags is a new video game based on beanbag toss, the nation's hottest backyard and tailgate sensation. Bags – or Cornhole, as it's called in some parts of the country – originated in the Midwest in the 1960s and has since become a staple at outdoor social events from coast to coast. Similar to horseshoes, Bags is a deceptively simple yet extremely competitive game where players try to toss beanbags into a hole in a slightly raised platform or "box" for points. Whether at a tailgate party or a summer barbecue, the game has become a social focal point, and the unmistakable thud of bags hitting the box is now a universal party soundtrack.
Virtual Console™
SPACE INVADERS: The Original Game (Super NES™, 1-2 players, Rated E for Everyone, 800 Wii Points): Experience one of gaming's iconic franchises in this perfect rendition of the arcade classic. Take aim at the field of invaders relentlessly marching toward you. Move quickly but carefully, using the barriers for protection as you avoid missiles fired by the aliens and try to destroy all of them before they reach the bottom of the screen. Further enhance the nostalgia by choosing from several modes that simulate different versions of the arcade game (such as upright cabinet or black-and-white). Or if you want to prove your superior skills to a friend, try the new VS mode and see who can stop the alien menace the quickest. All in all, it's pure gaming at its best, now with no quarters required.
FORGOTTEN WORLDS (SEGA GENESIS, 1-2 players, Rated E for Everyone – Fantasy Violence, 800 Wii Points): FORGOTTEN WORLDS is a one- or two-player side-scrolling shooter made by CAPCOM. It was one of the first games to incorporate 360-degree aiming and shooting. This SEGA GENESIS version provides the same impact and intensity of the classic arcade game. In the 29th century, without warning, warships broke through the sky, loaded with fiendish aliens. They rained down fire, bombs, missiles and napalm, leaving the land barren and inhospitable. Humanity was enslaved and Earth became known as the Forgotten World. In a hidden place, a group of brave humans raised two male children in secret. They brought up the young men as warriors, training them for battle. The two warriors emerged as armed machines of might, strength and super power – the Nameless Ones. Fight the hateful invaders as the powerful Nameless Ones. Collect Zenny to upgrade your weapons and satellite, and free the planet.
For more information about Wii, please visit wii.com.
joedick said:If anybody wants an authentic Space Invaders experience, just play the GB version on a Super GameBoy.
Cosmonaut X said:"Hey, see that Space Invaders Get Even? You want it? Huh? Do ya? Well here you go, here's Space Invaders... THE ORIGINAL GAME! Psyche! Jeez, you fall for it every time..."
pakkit said:They gave us the wrong Space Invaders (as in, not the WiiWare version),
joedick said:Not sure what Space Invaders: TOG offers, but I'm guessing it's not worth 1000 points.
All you need to know?crowphoenix said:I feel like I've played Forgotten Worlds, but I've forgotten what it is. Seems fitting.
I'm suspicious that the SNES Space Invaders is exactly the same as the SNES ROM of Space Invaders on the SGB cart, but I've never been able to determine whether that is the case or not.
Does anyone know? I'd have to go dig out my Super Game Boy to be sure...
I agree. Get Capcom Classic Collection (either 1 or 2) before you get this port. It's ok for when it was released, but as a VC title, your only cheating yourself if you can play PS2 games. I think this and Strider are on the same disc.drohne said:forgotten worlds is a neat game, but the genesis port is severely lacking -- it's missing a stage, it's missing elements from the stages it retains, it's much easier than the arcade game, and the controls aren't great. if you're interested, it's on one of those ps2 compilations
1. Useful for gathering the number of titles currently available though. VC-reviews is better in terms of listing past releases.Cheesemeister said:Hey, I've got a couple quick questions for people in this thread:
1. Do you read the Wikipedia article List of Virtual Console games (North America), or some variant thereof?
2. Do you consider ESRB-rated titles to be reliable in terms of listing upcoming VC titles?
3. Is such a list of ESRB-rated titles valuable information to you?
1. Not often. VC-Reviews is better for already-released titles, but occasionally I do check for ESRB-rated stuff.Cheesemeister said:Hey, I've got a couple quick questions for people in this thread:
1. Do you read the Wikipedia article List of Virtual Console games (North America), or some variant thereof?
2. Do you consider ESRB-rated titles to be reliable in terms of listing upcoming VC titles?
3. Is such a list of ESRB-rated titles valuable information to you?
Cheesemeister said:Hey, I've got a couple quick questions for people in this thread:
1. Do you read the Wikipedia article List of Virtual Console games (North America), or some variant thereof?
2. Do you consider ESRB-rated titles to be reliable in terms of listing upcoming VC titles?
3. Is such a list of ESRB-rated titles valuable information to you?
A Link to the Snitch said:The ESRB is a source only to say that a game exists. Not that it is going to be released.
Cheesemeister said:Do you personally interpret VC-eligible games being rated under "Wii" on the ESRB database to mean that a particular title is slated for release? Do you believe that Earthbound will be released on the VC at some point?
A Link to the Snitch said:I believe that they're considering it. However, my personal beliefs have no weight on the ESRB as a source - that a game is rated by the ESRB is of note in a related article, but not as an assertion that it will be released.
Cheesemeister said:Hey, I've got a couple quick questions for people in this thread:
1. Do you read the Wikipedia article List of Virtual Console games (North America), or some variant thereof?
2. Do you consider ESRB-rated titles to be reliable in terms of listing upcoming VC titles?
3. Is such a list of ESRB-rated titles valuable information to you?
I've been lurking in this thread for over a year, and I'm posting my first comment to reply to this, specifically.Somnid said:The DSi Factor:
I feel this is key to the continued interest and success of the VC. However, given the way the shop and systems are designed it seems destined to be less than it should as they may not interact with each other. I'm confident in seeing something like a "Virtual Portable" on the DSi but that would be only a unsatisfying consolation prize to a true cross console service that lets portable games and console games be played on either. If handle right the DSi could be like an iPod for games, a whole collection in your pocket.
267 down lots to go, let's see some current wishlists.
2 letters (MD) versus 3 letters (Gen) and title retail is precious; for the times when the same game pops up in multiple territories; and because I felt like it. >DavidDayton said:Question time...
Why did the thread title updated use (MD) instead of (Gen) or (Genesis)? I mean, it is the North American Virtual Console release...
That thread doesn't get nearly as much activity as this thread (but it's not locked tho); also, I don't follow Wiiware, only VC.DavidDayton said:VC/WW update? Did someone close down the Wii Ware thread?
1. I only follow this thread.Cheesemeister said:Hey, I've got a couple quick questions for people in this thread:
1. Do you read the Wikipedia article List of Virtual Console games (North America), or some variant thereof?
2. Do you consider ESRB-rated titles to be reliable in terms of listing upcoming VC titles?
3. Is such a list of ESRB-rated titles valuable information to you?
It certainly doesn't. Good to know we can talk about WW here too (I was always a bit... wary of doing so).lyre said:That thread doesn't get nearly as much activity as this thread (but it's not locked tho); also, I don't follow Wiiware, only VC.
Oh, I misunderstood what the title change was actually about then. I'll go back to my cave.lyre said:Well, I was merely mentioning that I sometimes list new WW titles that should be worth mentioning, but this is still the VC thread and that's what 'most' of the conversation should be about, even if it consists of guys bitching about long droughts of crappy weeks.
There's really nothing stopping anyone from bumping the official WW thread to talk about updates.
lyre said:And EU updates every Thursday correct?
Hey, I've got a couple quick questions for people in this thread:
1. Do you read the Wikipedia article List of Virtual Console games (North America), or some variant thereof?
2. Do you consider ESRB-rated titles to be reliable in terms of listing upcoming VC titles?
3. Is such a list of ESRB-rated titles valuable information to you?
FoxHimself said:So what did Europe get today?
Somnid said:I feel NES is more-or-less cleaned out. The current lineup seems to be a Mega Man a month so that should finish up quickly. Castlevania 3 is in the pipe and Nintendo's own works are worn down to only a small few. I only expect a little more out of here, and I hope that it can be prolonged with some imports.
Cheesemeister said:Do you personally interpret VC-eligible games being rated under "Wii" on the ESRB database to mean that a particular title is slated for release? Do you believe that Earthbound will be released on the VC at some point?
JSnake said:Sorry but EB is not coming. I've had several NOA employees tell me this.
Coolio McAwesome said:I don't think the NES is even close to being cleaned out. There's a lot of great games that haven't been released yet, including: Castlevana III, Contra, Mega Man 4-6, Crystalis, Metal Gear, Battletoads, RC Pro Am, Wizards and Warriors, Ironsword, Pro Wrestling, Blaster Master, Rygar, Little Samsom, Metal Storm, Life Force, Gun Nac, Faxanadu, Battle of Olympus, Adventures of Lolo 3, Journey to Silius, Kabuki Quantum Fighter, Kickle Cubicle, Jackal, Gunsmoke, Cobra Triangle, Gargoyle's Quest II, Magic of Scheherazade, and the Guardian Legend. Given that the first TMNT game was released already, there's always an outside chance that other licenced games eventually show up (which would include games like TMNT 2-3, Duck Tales 1-2, Rescue Rangers, Willow, Batman, Goonies II, and Little Nemo). There are still dozens upon dozens of NES games that I'd like to see show up on the VC.