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Nintendo has not released a rechargeable battery kit in regions outside Japan, but the Wii Remote and WaveBird controllers both use special battery contacts that are compatible with previously released Game Boy Advance accessories (AGB-003 and AGB-004, battery and charger respectively).
The uDraw GameTablet was developed by THQ as a gaming accessory for the Wii.It was the first drawing device for the seventh generation consoles. [citation needed] After the release of Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter for the Nintendo Wii, THQ began development on the uDraw, then called the "Drawn To Life Pal" in reference to the Drawn to Life series. [3]
Active Life: Outdoor Challenge (Family Trainer: Athletic World in Japan and Family Trainer in Europe) is a 2008 video game for the Wii produced by Namco Bandai Games. Players use a mat similar to the Power Pad in conjunction with the Wii Remote in order to complete a variety of mini-games. The game is comparable to Wii Fit.
The game simulates the playing of drums with players either using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk or two Wii Remotes for control. Following a scrolling runway similar to music games such as Guitar Hero , players gesture their appropriate controller in time to the music and prompts that appear on screen.
Wii Zapper with Wii Remote and Nunchuk. The Wii Zapper is a gun shell peripheral for the Wii Remote. The name is a reference to and successor of the NES Zapper light gun for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It is mainly used to enhance controls for shooter games, including light gun shooters, first-person shooters, and third-person shooters.
Cleaning pawprints from the floor using the toothbrush is just one way for the player to earn Happy Points. The game's HUD shows the player's remaining time (upper left) and battery life (lower right). Chibi-Robo! is a platform-adventure game that puts the player in direct control of a tiny, battery-powered robot that does housework for humans ...
The hockey stick peripheral for NHL Slapshot. A miniature hockey stick peripheral was released with the game, allowing (but not requiring) the player to insert the Wii Remote and its Nunchuk attachment and simulate playing with a real hockey stick.
A few months prior to the release of the Nintendo DS version of the game, a Wii version was announced. The DS version involved fighting characters through use of drawing shapes with the stylus and touch screen of the DS, something the developers were planning on recreating with the Wii Remote's motion control. However, only the DS version ever ...