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Wii (video game series)

Simulation game series


Simulation game series

FieldValue
titleWii
image[[File:Wii.svg200px]]
developerNintendo EAD
NDcube
Ganbarion
TOSE
Eighting
publisherNintendo
platformsWii
Wii U
Nintendo Switch
genreSimulation
Party
Sports
Fitness
first release versionWii Sports
first release dateNovember 19, 2006
latest release versionNintendo Switch Sports
latest release dateApril 29, 2022

NDcube Ganbarion TOSE Eighting Wii U Nintendo Switch Party Sports Fitness

Wii is a series of simulation games published by Nintendo for the game console of the same name, as well as its successor, the Wii U. After a seven-year hiatus, the game Nintendo Switch Sports, described officially as "a new iteration of the Wii Sports series," was announced, the first game to drop the "Wii" from its title. These games feature a common design theme, with recurring elements including casual-oriented gameplay, casts consisting mostly or entirely of Miis, and control schemes that simulate real-life activities.

The Wii series was conceived by longtime Nintendo developer Shigeru Miyamoto to package and sell similar Wii Remote prototype games in a single package.

Gameplay

The Wii uses motion sensors in its Wii Remote to allow gameplay that incorporates physical movements by the player to control action within the game. For example, in the Baseball game included in Wii Sports, the player holds the controller like a baseball bat and swings it in order to hit the ball in the game. However, in Wii Chess, on the menus and in actual gameplay, the control scheme makes use of the D-pad on the Wii Remote instead of the Wii Remote Pointer.

Games

Wii has become one of the best-selling video game franchises, with each Wii game selling millions of copies. Wii Sports in particular is regarded as the third best-selling video game of all time, as well as the best-selling single console game of all time. By June 2009, Wii Fit had helped the health game genre to generate collective revenues of $2 billion, most of which was grossed by the game*'''s 18.22 million sales at the time. The largest subset of the franchise is *Wii Sports''.

''Wii Sports''

GameConsoleRelease dateDescriptionSales
Wii SportsWiiThe first game in the series and a launch game for the Wii console. The game was bundled with the console in all regions except Japan and South Korea. Wii Sports is known for starting a new development direction for Nintendo involving simple gameplay, simple graphics, and motion control. It is one of the best-selling video games of all time, as well as the best-selling single console game of all time.82.90million
Wii Sports ResortSuccessor to Wii Sports. It is one of the first titles to require the Wii MotionPlus accessory, which was bundled with the game. Though the game was initially sold separately, it was later bundled with the Wii console. It features ten brand new sports while only two sports reappear from its predecessor, Wii Sports, which was bowling and golf, making it a total of twelve sports games overall.33.14million
Wii Sports ClubWii U*Tennis* & *Bowling*
*Golf*
*Baseball* & *Boxing*
Retail
A remake of the original Wii Sports game, requiring the Wii MotionPlus accessory. Each sport was originally sold individually, with a retail release with all five sports eventually releasing.
Nintendo Switch SportsNintendo Switch*Golf* *Basketball*A new entry utilizing the Switch's Joy-Con in order to play. It added 3 new sports, while 3 sports returned at launch from previous entries, bowling, tennis and swordplay, renamed to "Chambara", making it a total of 6 sports at launch, and 8 sports as of Golf''''s and Basketball''''s inclusion.16.27million

''Wii Play''

GameConsoleRelease dateDescriptionSales
Wii PlayWiiurl=https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/pdf/2010/100129e.pdf#page=6title=Financial Results Briefing for the Six-Month Period ended December 2009publisher=Nintendodate=October 31, 2009format=PDFaccess-date=January 29, 2010page=11archive-date=June 5, 2011archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605080135/http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/pdf/2010/100129e.pdf#page=6url-status=live}}28.02 million
Wii Play: MotionIncludes twelve minigames and is bundled with the Wii Remote Plus, which is required to play. The minigames were created by various developers, including Good-Feel, Skip Ltd., and Arzest Corporation.1.26 million

''Wii Fit''

GameConsoleRelease dateDescriptionSales
Wii FitWiiThe first game to use the Wii Balance Board peripheral, which it was bundled with. As a fitness-oriented game, it measures a user's weight, telling the user their health based on body mass index, and features minigames for the user to exercise or to improve posture.url=https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/sales/software/wii.htmltitle=Nintendo Top Selling Software Sales Units: Wiidate=2012-03-31access-date=2025-02-14publisher=Nintendoarchive-date=2019-06-15archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190615115945/https://www.nintendo.co.jp/ir/en/finance/software/wii.htmlurl-status=live}}
Wii Fit PlusAn enhanced version of Wii Fit. Included a new Training Plus minigame category, My Wii Fit Plus, an area that allows the player to perform workouts that they created, and premade workouts, a Multiplayer mode, and the ability to register babies and dogs/cats.21.13 million
Wii Fit UWii UA new entry expanding on some of the content added in *Wii Fit Plus*, including a new Dance minigame category, new workout options, Miiverse support as a Gym Community, and the ability to use a Fit Meter, a pedometer specifically made for Wii Fit U that tracks steps and elevation.

''Wii Party''

GameConsoleRelease dateDescriptionSales
Wii PartyWiiPlayers partake in various party games, similar to the Mario Party series.9.35 million
Wii Party UWii UA sequel to Wii Party for the Wii U console, developed by the same team behind the original Wii Party.1.58 million

Other titles

GameConsoleRelease dateDescriptionSales
Wii ChessWii WiiWareA chess game playable in either single player or online mode. The game was released under the name "Tsūshin Taikyoku: World Chess" as WiiWare in Japan, and the physical release was exclusive to the European market. The game was never released outside Europe and Japan.
Wii MusicWiiPlayers use the Wii Remote and Nunchuk to simulate playing instruments.2.65 million
Wii Karaoke UWii UPlayers can either use a USB microphone or the microphone on the Wii U Gamepad to sing along to the music.

References

References

  1. (February 9, 2022). "Nintendo Switch Sports - Announcement Trailer - Nintendo Switch".
  2. Kohler, Chris. (April 5, 2017). "Q&A: Design lessons learned from a decade at Nintendo's EAD". [[UBM TechWeb]].
  3. Davis, Ryan. "Wii Sports Review".
  4. Tom Ivan. (May 8, 2009). "Wii Sports The Best Selling Game Ever?".
  5. Kris Pigna. (2009-06-28). "Health Games Generate $2 Billion in Worldwide Sales". [[1UP.com]].
  6. Kyle Orland. (January 28, 2011). "Super Mario Galaxy 2 Sells 6.15M Worldwide, Wii Sports Series Passes 102M". [[Gamasutra]].
  7. (May 8, 2025). "Financial Results Explanatory Material".
  8. (October 31, 2009). "Financial Results Briefing for the Six-Month Period ended December 2009". [[Nintendo]].
  9. (2012-04-27). "Financial Results Briefing for the Q3 Fiscal Year". [[Nintendo]].
  10. (2012-03-31). "Nintendo Top Selling Software Sales Units: Wii". [[Nintendo]].
  11. Harris, Craig. (October 3, 2010). "Wii Party Review".
  12. (23 January 2013). "Wii U Party Will Get The Family Together This Summer". Nintendo Life.
  13. (September 30, 2015). "Top Selling Software Sales Units".
  14. As of March 2009.
  15. (2009-05-08). "Financial Results Briefing for the Fiscal Year Ended March 2009: Supplementary Information". Nintendo.
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