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Title: Nintendo Ds - Help


buffy_fan1 - May 26, 2006 04:53 PM (GMT)
I've just bought Nintendo DS this afternoon :thumbsup: It's second hand and doesn't have a box or instructions. The problem is I don't know how long put on charge for, how can I tell if it's charged?

Is there any else I need to know! :shrug:

Dan Brown - May 26, 2006 05:42 PM (GMT)
The Nintendo DS has two led lights one for the to show its turned on (the green light) but this also tells if the battery is low by turning red. When you then plug the charger in the other LED light will turn orange, and then turn off when the charging is complete. You can turn the DS off while it charges and play on it while it charges to the choice is yours.....

Hope this helps......

"I am my thoughts" - June 1, 2006 12:07 PM (GMT)
Also. it charges for about 4 hours. :)

Sarah

prophecy girl - June 24, 2006 02:32 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
New DS proves object of desire



Until Nintendo's Wii games leaves the starting gates, the company is eschewing the relative dead duck GameCube and pumping its creative juices into the ridiculously popular DS handheld.
Yet for all its unique features and quirky software, the console could hardly be dubbed truly portable.

Its chunky Fisher Price stylings pale in comparison to the techno-gloss of Sony's rival PlayStation Portable (PSP).

In time honoured tradition, Nintendo has snubbed the loyal band first to take the DS home by releasing a new, improved model, a mere 15 months after it first hit the market.

It will come as no surprise to the hardened Nintendophile. The N64 was the only console in the Japanese giant's history to escape the makeover treatment.

Yet the DS Lite represents such an aesthetic and technical leap over mark one, it is hard not to recommend splashing out again, even if you already adore your trusty original.

Brighter screen

Retaining the screen-saving clamshell design, the DS Lite is slimmer and sexier than its predecessor - 39% smaller and 21% lighter, to be exact.


Despite the diminutive dimensions, though, squinting is not an issue as the screens remain the same size.
Nodding to the liveries of recent design triumphs, the DS Lite will be available in iPod white or sleek PSP black.

Style aside, the Lite's real trump card is its screen brightness control, allowing players four blistering settings which can pump up the luminescence to PSP-trouncing levels.

With the hardware effectively unchanged, the machine still lacks the media playback of the PSP, but it can at least now turn heads in public.

In Japan the DS Lite could not have been more popular had it been given away for free, with 600,000 being snapped up every month.

It hits the European High Street on 23 June, with a raft of quality games hot on its heels spearheaded by New Super Mario Bros a week later.


Story from BBC NEWS:

prophecy girl - July 1, 2006 04:44 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
Mario returns to European screens 

Nintendo favourite Mario has made a return to platform game fans screens across Europe, after a break of more than 10 years.
New Super Mario Bros. is a scrolling game for the handheld Nintendo DS.

The new episode combines 3D characters with similar gameplay to the original Super Mario Bros. game, which sold more than 40.2 million copies worldwide.

The latest edition has already proved to be a smash in Japan, where it has sold more than 1.25 million copies.




/bbc.co.uk




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