Japanese electronics manufacturer, Sharp, is pushing their newest mobile display technology into production this June. The technology itself is centered on 3D displays without the use of glasses.
Sound familiar?
On Xbox, Nintendo Switch and PC, Farewell North works as an open world exploration adventure in which you get the chance to be a good doggo
Rare has had an astonishing journey since being founded in 1985. But of the 125 titles released to date, which are the 7 best Rare games?
Mario Kart DS still plays a fine game of handheld Mario Kart more than 20 years after its initial release.
I really liked the Mission Mode. They had you doing crazy stuff like driving backwards, or collecting all the collectibles as quick as you can between a litter of enemies.
They should add it to Mario Kart 9 for sure, along w online leaderboards for the mission stuff. That's how they could expand on the already excellent Mario Kart 8, bc track quality it's hard to imagine them getting much better beyond slightly tighter graphics and 4k on the Switch 2. Maybe more Diddy Kong Racing-esque adventure layout w more emphasis on boats and planes.
It's hard to say that Mario Kart DS is the best "handheld Mario Kart" though, bc Mario Kart 8 is handheld. It's definitely got some uniqueness that I appreciated. The 2 merged together would be amazing.
Mario Kart Double Dash, MKDS and Super Mario Kart are the only three that are actually fun to play. Sure MK8 is pretty but its just that. It lacks the soul of double dash. the DS one controls really really well and the orignial with the feather power up is cool.
Looks cool. Good to see depth of perception is the new benchmark for 3D instead of cheap thrills.
ya know i never knew sharp was a japanese company
But the question is would sharp want the MILLIONS of dollar from the sale of MILLIONS of 3DS? Wait that's a silly question.
3DS is looking like it'll be a world wide success just from the fact it's a new DS.
Am i the only being that knows that those "no glasses" 3d screens are very hard on the eyes/brain and causes headaches?
Considering Sharp have provided screens for Nintendo handhelds for a very long time and the timeframe of the announcement, as well the exact specifications I'd say it's almost a foregone conclusion.
Nintendo may have been part of the development of the screen from the beginning.
I'm rather more interested in the holographic storage card that was patented by Nintendo(and affiliates). Apparently it's usable in normal media card slots and a DS card sized one can hold about 60gbs according to estimates!