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Nintendo Wii to hit U.S. stores Nov. 19

Video-game giant says successor to GameCube will cost $250

Image: Wii console and controller
Nintendo's next-generation video-game console, called "Wii," is scheduled for release in the United States on Nov. 19 at a cost of $249.99.
Issei Kato / Reuters
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updated 6:22 p.m. ET Sept. 14, 2006

NEW YORK - Nintendo Co. announced Thursday that its Wii game console will go on sale in the U.S. on Nov. 19 for $250, hoping that like its plucky game character Mario, it will be able to take on the gorillas of the market: rival products from Sony and Microsoft.

The Wii, which is about the size of a large paperback book, is both cheaper and smaller than Sony Corp.'s much-awaited PlayStation 3, which launches just two days earlier with $500 and $600 models.

The Wii (pronounced "wee") is the successor to Nintendo's GameCube, the third-best selling console of its generation after the PlayStation 2 and Microsoft Corp.'s Xbox. Nintendo's Game Boy and DS are dominant in the market for portable game machines, but the company hasn't been a market leader in consoles since the early 1990s.

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The company had promised to launch the Wii sometime in the last quarter of this year. By bringing it out on time, it's avoiding Sony's embarrassing PlayStation 3 delays.

The Wii breaks the mold of console controllers: It's a slim wand that communicates the user's movements wirelessly to the main machine. Nintendo demonstrated a bowling game in which the player swings the wand like he's throwing a ball down the lane. The wand relies in part on a sensor bar that needs to be installed, with tape or other means, on the front of the TV set, adding somewhat to the complexity of the setup.

Nintendo hopes the innovative controller, small size, low price and popular game franchises like Mario Brothers and Zelda will recruit new players to console gaming.

"The next step in gaming is bringing gaming to the masses," said Nintendo of America President Reggie Fils-Aime.

Nintendo plans to ship 4 million Wii units this year, with the largest share going to the Americas.