Saturday, December 02, 2006

Japanese gamers brave frosty weather for Nintendo Wii (Reuters)

Japanese gamers brave frosty weather for Nintendo Wii (Reuters)
   

A customer receives his Nintendo Wii on the day of its Japanese launch at an electronics retail shop in Tokyo December 2, 2006. (Kiyoshi Ota - JAPAN/Reuters)Reuters - Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s (7974.OS) game console, the Wii, went on sale in Japan on Saturday, greeted by thousands of shivering but exhilarated game enthusiasts who had lined up through a wintry night to bring home the latest machine.




Nintendo's Wii hits Japanese stores (AP)

Nintendo's Wii hits Japanese stores (AP)
   

Student Kentaro Watanabe, in a papier-mache controller, receives a bag containing his Wii video game console as he becomes one of the first customers to obtain Nintendo's much touted console at the Yurakucho shop of electronics retailer Bic Camera in Saturday morning, December 2, 2006. Two weeks after it first went on sale in the U.S., the game playing gadget made its debut on the Japanese domestic market. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi)AP - Nintendo's Wii video game system hit Japanese stores Saturday with long lineups and shortages, following its sellout U.S. launch last month.




Japan gamers brave frosty weather for Nintendo Wii (Reuters)

Japan gamers brave frosty weather for Nintendo Wii (Reuters)
   

Customers with Nintendo's new video game console "Wii" in Tokyo. Thousands of video-game fans waited all night for the Japanese debut of Nintendo's next-generation Wii, brightening the company's hopes of wresting market share from troubled Sony's PlayStation(AFP/Yoshikazu Tsuno)Reuters - Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s (7974.OS) game console, the Wii, went on sale in Japan on Saturday, greeted by thousands of shivering but exhilarated game enthusiasts who had lined up through a wintry night to bring home the latest machine.




Nintendo's Wii game console debuts in Japan (AFP)

Nintendo's Wii game console debuts in Japan (AFP)
   

A costumed customer as a controller of Nintendo's new video game console Wii in Tokyo. Thousands of video-game fans waited all night for the Japanese debut of Nintendo's next-generation Wii, brightening the company's hopes of wresting market share from troubled Sony's PlayStation(AFP/Yoshikazu Tsuno)AFP - Thousands of video-game fans waited all night for the Japanese debut of Nintendo's next-generation Wii, brightening the company's hopes of wresting market share from troubled Sony's PlayStation.




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