Nintendo DS is a general product name that applies to all versions of Nintendo’s popular dual-screen handheld game system, including the Nintendo DS, the Nintendo DS Lite, the Nintendo DSi, and the Nintendo DSi XL. This wide definition seems confusing at first, but most gamers use proper names to distinguish among the different Nintendo DS builds. Fans of the first-generation Nintendo DS often refer to the bulkier hardware as the “DS Phat,” while Nintendo officially terms it as the “original-style” Nintendo DS.

This profile outlines the capabilities of this original-style Nintendo DS, or the “Phat.”

The Nintendo DS’s First Release

The Nintendo DS hit American stores on November 21, 2004, and was released in Japan on December 2, 2004. The first Nintendo console to be introduced in America before Japan. Nintendo DS is the successor to Nintendo’s Game Boy Advance, another popular handheld system.

The Competition

The Nintendo DS had two direct competitors: Sony’s PlayStation Portable (PSP) and Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch, each with its own strengths and weaknesses.

Nintendo DS Functions

The primary function of the Nintendo DS is, of course, is to play games and entertain the masses. Whereas most game systems today offer a true multimedia experience, the Nintendo DS clings to the comfortable simplicity of plugging in a game and playing it.

One feature that helped the Nintendo DS move at retail is its backward compatibility with Nintendo’s previous handheld system, the Game Boy Advance (GBA). The Game Boy Advance cartridge slot is located at the bottom of the DS.

Nintendo DS games are officially referred to as “game cards.”

The system does have a few surprises. For instance, each Nintendo DS comes preloaded with PictoChat, a picture-based chat program that lets a locally based group of people communicate.

The Nintendo DS can access a Wi-Fi signal, which allows for competitive online play in certain titles. In some games, only one game card is needed for up to four players. The Nintendo DS can also download game demos in game retail outlets that contain “DS Download Stations.”

In February 2006, Nintendo released an Opera browser for the DS. It’s since been discontinued.

The Games 

The system’s touch-sensitive screen and built-in microphone let developers experiment with building unique games that can’t be replicated fully on other systems. 

The Nintendo DS also functions as a clock and an alarm.

The Nintendo DS has earned a particularly favorable reputation as a family-friendly machine. Games like the puzzle-heavy “Brain Age” and the pet simulator “Nintendogs” helped propel the DS’s enormous success, putting it in the hands of kids, adults, the elderly, experienced gamers, and beginners.

The Nintendo DS’s puzzle games and role-playing games are unmatched. Platformer games like “New Super Mario Bros.” and “Mega Man ZX” prove that the challenge offered by two-dimensional action games is ageless. Less conventional games are plentiful, too: You can whip up a meal with “Cooking Mama” and even foster your fitness with “Let’s Yoga” and “Let’s Pilates.”

Nintendo has crafted a game line called “Touch Generations," a selection of titles meant to appeal to gamers of all ages and skill levels. Some “Touch Generations” titles include “Brain Age,” “Elite Beat Agents,” and “Hotel Dusk: Room 215.”

The Price

Cost for Games

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