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Nokia N-Gage

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Revision as of 11:07, 27 June 2006 by SoNick (talk | contribs) (Categorization)
File:Ngage.jpg
Nokia N-Gage handheld console
The Nokia N-Gage is a mobile telephone and a handheld game system in one unit designed using the Nokia 3650 as a base. It was launched on October 7, 2003

History

In the early 2000s, gamers were increasingly carrying around both a cell phone and a Game Boy, the most popular handheld game system. Nokia spotted an opportunity to combine these devices into a more handy unit. The company also included multiplayer over Bluetooth or the Internet (via the N-Gage Arena service), MP3 and Real Audio/Video playback, and PDA-like features into the system.

Despite the large amount of attention gamers gave the system before it was launched, it has not been as commercially popular as Nokia estimated. Most gamers blame the sales performance on the poor selection of games compared to those available to the handheld-leading Nintendo GameBoy Advance while still costing more than twice as much. In addition to its problems as a game system, it also faces problems as a cell phone. The N-Gage is only carried by one or two mobile phone providers, because current distribution focuses on specialty video game retailers and big-box electronics outlets.

The N-Gage has also been criticized for its clumsy design: to insert a game, users must remove the phone's plastic cover and access the battery compartment. Also, the speaker is in the side edge of the phone, resulting in many mocking it as talking into a "taco phone". Because of this its comfort for longer calls has been criticized.

With the release of the "QD" upgrade of the system, sales of N-Gage units decks passed the 1 million mark but are still far behind other handheld consoles. The situation is not expected to improve with the impending arrival of the PlayStation Portable and Nintendo DS consoles. Nevertheless, by 2005, Nokia is expected to have more than 50 games available for retail on the system.

N-Gage QD

The N-Gage QD is Nokia's successor to the N-Gage. It revises the device's physical design with a more convenient cartridge swapping, and speaker and microphone on the flat side of the device so that calls may be made like a traditional phone. The device retails at a lower price. MP3 and video playback and USB connectivity options have been removed, presumably to cut costs (its launch price was lower than the original version's). The machine's MMC card can still be loaded with MP3 or video files via Bluetooth or a memory card reader, however. The sound output has been reduced to mono only. The hardware specification of the N-Gage QD is the same as the original N-Gage. The telephone portion no longer supports GSM triband, and now comes in several dualband variants

Sonic Games for the N-Gage

External links