
Nintendo was the last company to give their press conference at this years E3, and they also had the most hype of anyone at the show. With the knowledge we’d be getting a new console and some more news on the 3DS, all eyes were on them. Did they show up? Let’s see.
The conference opened with an orchestra playing some of the classic tunes from the Legend of Zelda games, which set up the talk for a Zelda retrospect in honor of its 25th anniversary. Once the orchestra concluded the man himself Mr. Shigeru Miyamoto took the stage to make some announcements regarding the classic franchise. He made the announcement that all of Nintendo’s current hardware would be getting a Zelda game. The 3DS would of course be getting Ocarina of Time 3D (next week), the newly opened 3DS eShop has just released The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening, DSi Ware will be getting The Legend of Zelda: The Four Swords (for free), and Skyward Sword was confirmed to be out holiday of this year. Miyamoto also made the announcement that there will be Zelda orchestral concerts held in different regions around the world. You’ll also get a gold Wii Remote if you pre-order Skyward Sword, as well as the games original soundtrack. Ocarina of Time will get a soundtrack as well.

Head honcho, president and CEO of Nintendo Satoru Iwata showed up to confirm that Nintendo had a new console. He pulled a fast one though and made people wait a bit longer to see it. He instead spoke about the 3DS and announced that there would be five new first-party 3DS games coming. Star Fox, Mario, Kid Icarus Uprising, Mario Kart, and Luigi’s Mansion 2.
Iwata then gave way to one Reggie Fils-Aime president of Nintendo of America. Reggie spoke more on those five 3DS games, gave some more details about each one. Star Fox showed off group play and tilt controls, that will be out in September. Kid Icarus showed some multiplayer. Mario Kart has hang-gliding and driving underwater. Luigi’s Mansion will have multiple mansions, and Mario has finally gotten his Tanooki Suit back. Some third-party 3DS games were shown, Resident Evil, Ace Combat, Pac-Man, Tekken, and Metal Gear were all in full force showing off the 3DS technology.

Then we got the big news, the announcement that everyone was waiting for, the new Nintendo console. The Nintendo Wii U is real. So Nintendo showed us the controller for this thing, and really only the controller. It has two thumbsticks and eight face buttons, standard for controllers in this day and age. The new addition is a touch screen in the middle of the controller. You can see the pic below to get a better view of what this thing looks like. Now a lot of people have been confused, this is not just an addition for the Nintendo Wii, it’s the controller for an entirely new console. Nintendo didn’t mention the actual box at all during the entire conference, but it does exist (you can see it in videos showing off the controller). The controller is what was focused on though. The 6.2 inch touchscreen does not support multi-touch, it is however compatible with a stylus. The biggest feature of the Wii U is its streaming capability. If you are playing your Wii U on your TV you can instantly switch and go from playing that game on your TV to the touchscreen on the Wii U controller. Iwata was quick to squelch the ideas that this controller could be used as a portable gaming device, since the Wii U controller doesn’t have that hardware in it the console itself needs to be on and near to stream the video. The controller has speakers and a front-facing camera as well.

That’s a lot of talk about what it is, but what about the games, what will these games look like, when can I play this and how much will it cost me. Well Nintendo gave no specs for the Wii U so we don’t know what’s running it. It was confirmed after the press conference that it will output video in 1080p, and we saw games like Darksiders 2, Batman Arkham City, Metro Last Light, and Ninja Gaiden 3 being shown off. It was later revealed that the footage of those games was taken from the PS3 and 360 versions of those games, but Wii U graphics will be “comparable.” One game we did see a brief bit of was what looked like a new Legend of Zelda game. It was running in HD and looked spectacular, and it had an interesting use of the controller screen keeping the menu/inventory on the touchscreen and keeping the game itself on the TV. Other than that Nintendo didn’t show any games actually running on the system because it’s still very early in development. John Ricotello of EA came out to make sure it’s known that EA is behind the Nintendo Wii U.
So Nintendo is an interesting beast, I’ve heard a lot of people say that they came out of the conference more confused than when they went in. I have to say I feel of that mindset as well. Only time will tell how the Wii U will fare, what are all of your thoughts?