New gadgets to tempt gamers

  • Associated Press
  • Friday, May 14, 2004 9:00pm
  • Business

LOS ANGELES – Most video game fanatics aren’t going to be satisfied with the latest crop of snazzy games. They want better gadgets, too.

Whether they were banging digital drums or playing “Half-Life 2” with pricey new graphics cards, visitors to this week’s Electronic Entertainment Expo got to check out hundreds of new game-enhancing accouterments.

With no successors to the Xbox, GameCube and PlayStation2 consoles this year, Nintendo Co. and Sony Corp. touted new hand-held game systems.

Sony’s PlayStation Portable, called PSP, features a 4.3-inch color screen, stereo speakers and wireless Internet for multiplayer games. Though as small as a thin paperback book, it’s nearly as powerful as the full-sized PlayStation 2, with music, video and 3-D graphics capabilities.

The PSP will be available in Japan by the end of the year, followed by Europe and the United States in spring 2005. A price hasn’t been set.

Nintendo, which has its U.S. headquarters in Redmond, will try to strengthen its grip on the hand-held market with the Game Boy DS. The silver-and-black device flips opens like a clamshell and has dual 3-inch color screens – that’s the DS in its name – for all sorts of new game possibilities.

In one game, “Metroid: Prime Hunters,” the bottom screen showed the in-game action while the top displayed a map to help players navigate. The DS has Bluetooth and Wi-Fi for multiplayer games and plays existing Game Boy Advance cartridges, along with a new format. The company disclosed no price or release date.

Game Boy, meanwhile, is getting GPS satellite-tracking capability from a Canadian outfit, Red Sky Mobile Inc. But the system costs $199, double the price of a Game Boy Advance. As of yet, there are no games that use the technology.

And from Majesco Sales Inc. comes Game Boy Advance Video – $19.99 special cartridges for kids to watch entire episodes of “SpongeBob SquarePants,” “Sonic X” and other favorites.

SL-Interphase of Tucson, Ariz., meanwhile, put an oversized spin on hand-held game machines with its Rogue prototype. The size of a tablet PC, the system sports a Pentium 4 processor with a 10.4-inch color touch-screen, wireless capability, a trackball and plenty of buttons for waging online battles just about anywhere. Plug the Rogue into a dock, and you have a regular desktop computer.

Sales of video game accessories have been relatively flat, accounting for $1.2 billion in 2003, according to the market research firm NPD Group. But each year, companies continue to roll out new items.

Many controllers at this week’s E3 show encourage gamers to put down the potato chips and get off the couch.

On the heels of Sony’s popular EyeToy video camera game comes the DK Bongo drum controller for the GameCube. One game for it, “Donkey Konga,” is a frantic palm-slapping test of timing and rhythm. Players can pound away to more than 30 children’s and popular tunes alongside Donkey Kong. Parents, be forewarned: Earplugs aren’t included.

Powergrid Fitness Inc. had the kiloWatt Intensity Game System. Instead of letting you sedately kick back and munch a bag of chips while you blast aliens, kiloWatt forces you to push against a mounted controller through 20 levels of resistance.

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