DSi Shop
Inside of the DSi Shop you'll find DSi Ware. DSi Ware encompasses both software and games for the Nintendo DSi. At launch, Nintendo will have five games in the DSi Shop: WarioWare: Snapped, Bird & Beans, Brain Age Express: Math, Master of Illusion Express: Funny Face, and Art Style: AQUIA. Nintendo will also have the Nintendo DSi Web browser powered by Opera available as a free download.
You can purchase DSi Ware titles by using Nintendo DSi points. Nintendo DSi point cards will be sold in increments of 2,000 points with an MSRP of $19.99. Credit card users will be able to purchase points directly from the DSi Shop. All users will be given 1,000 free points if they log on to the DSi Shop by October 5, 2009. Software titles in the DSi Shop will be free or will cost 200, 500, or 800-plus points.
At the 2009 Game Developers Conference, Nintendo let it slip that the company might release games specifically tailored to the DSi and allow developers to add extra functionality to games. Nintendo has already incorporated the use of the camera in the DSi Shop title WarioWare: Snapped. Whether the company will introduce DSi-specific advancements via DS cartridge-based games has yet to be seen.
DSi vs. DS Lite Load Times
A quick test of the DSi and DS Lite showed that the Lite boots games slightly faster than the DSi when coming from a fully powered-off state. We suspect that the added hardware and software requirements of the DSi give it a few more things to do. Since the DSi now supports the ability to hot swap cartridges, the cold boot time figure is pretty much thrown out the window. Loading from the DSi's menu screen almost cut the load time in half for Mario Kart DS, and shaved off a fair amount in GTA Chinatown Wars.
Nintendo DSi Load Times
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
The Nintendo DSi brings an adequate blend of improvements and new features that deserve a look. Many of the minor improvements add up to make the DSi a worthy successor to the DS Lite. We've seen only the beginning for the DSi Shop, and its prospects seem bright. Through it, Nintendo could breathe life into many older games in much the same way WiiWare does for the Wii. Keep an eye out for the console on April 5.
v8_m8 posted Apr 12, 2009 12:33 am PT (does not meet display criteria. sign in to show)
freakbabyblues- posted Apr 10, 2009 2:42 pm PT (does not meet display criteria. sign in to show)