Nintendo to keep Revolution software prices down
Software prices for Nintendo’s Revolution console will buck the trend of next-generation titles being priced more expensively than their current-gen counterparts, with Nintendo boss Satoru Iwata expecting to keep prices below $50.
Although Nintendo can only directly control the prices of its first-party titles, it’s those games which are likely to set the pricing benchmark for the system
Read the complete story Share:
Comment
Ubisoft acquires rights to Far Cry/CryEng
- Gateway announces ULV Core Solo processor notebook
- Intel launches Community PC platform for India
- Epistar to develop blue-LED chips for seven-inch panel backlighting
- TrustELI adds small biz offering
- Spam is still getting through?! Microsoft is going to be the end of us all?!! Must be the morning roundup...
- Dell introduces two slim Core Duo-powered notebooks
- Lycos offers VoIP service
- 30th birthday: TG Daily pays tribute to Apple
- Intel introduces the "Jaagruti" ruggedized Community Computer to India
US House debates bill to allow nationally franchised ISPs, VoIP providers
- LG ships 200 million TVs
- Intel imagines 300,000 sqft chip factories
- Warner to offer direct-download Harry Potter 4, other videos to Dutch customers
- Quad-SLI system shipments get into gear
- Disc Maker rolls out automated CD ripper
- Apple ships Final Cut Studio 5.1 for Intel-Macs
- Google, AOL detail partnership
- ATI gets up off the mat, takes swipe at rival
- TI chip merges Bluetooth and FM radio
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners





Software prices for Nintendo's Revolution console will buck the trend of next-generation titlesNintendo to keep Revolution software prices down : lire la suite