Seventh generation of video game consoles























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Part of a series on the
History of video games









In the history of video games, the seventh generation of home consoles began in late 2005 with the release of Microsoft's Xbox 360, and continued with the release of Sony Computer Entertainment's PlayStation 3 (PS3) and Nintendo's Wii the following year. Each new console introduced a new type of breakthrough in technology: the Xbox 360 could play games rendered natively at high-definition video (HD) resolutions; the PlayStation 3 offered HD movie playback via a built-in 3D Blu-ray Disc player; while the Wii focused on integrating controllers with movement sensors as well as joysticks.[1] Some Wii controllers could be moved about to control in-game actions, which enabled players to simulate real-world actions through movement during gameplay (e.g., in the Wii sports tennis game, the user swings the controller to hit the on-screen image of a tennis ball). The seventh generation of handheld consoles began in November 2004 with the North American introduction of the Nintendo DS (NDS) as a "third pillar", alongside Nintendo's existing Game Boy Advance and GameCube consoles.[2] Another handheld console, the PlayStation Portable (PSP), came out in December. By this generation, video game consoles had become an important part of the global IT infrastructure; it is estimated that video game consoles represented 25% of the world's general-purpose computational power in 2007.[3]


Joining Nintendo in the motion market, Sony Computer Entertainment released the PlayStation Move in September 2010. The PlayStation Move features motion-sensing gaming, similar to that of the Wii. Microsoft joined the motion-sensing scene in November 2010 with its Kinect (previously announced under the working title "Project Natal" in June 2009). Unlike the other two motion systems (for PlayStation 3 and Wii), Kinect does not use controllers of any sort, and instead makes the players act as the "controllers". Having sold eight million units in its first 60 days on the market, Kinect claimed the Guinness World Record of being the "fastest selling consumer electronics device".[4][5] While the Xbox 360 offers wired as well as wireless controllers as a standalone product, all PlayStation 3 controllers can be used in wired and wireless configurations.


As for handheld systems, the Nintendo DS (NDS), launched on November 21, 2004, features a touch screen and built-in microphone, and supports wireless IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) standards.[6] Additionally, the revised version of the NDS, the Nintendo DSi, features two built-in cameras, the ability to download games from the DSi store, and a web browser. The PlayStation Portable (PSP), released later that year on December 12, 2004, followed a different pattern. It became the first handheld video game console to use an optical disc format, Universal Media Disc (UMD), as its primary storage media.[7][8] Sony also gave the PSP robust multimedia capability;[9] connectivity with the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, other PSPs; as well as Internet connectivity.[10][11] The NDS likewise had connectivity to the internet through the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection and Nintendo DS Browser, as well as wireless connectivity to other DS systems and Wii consoles. Despite high sales numbers for both consoles, PSP sales have consistently lagged behind those of the NDS; thus, the PSP can claim the distinction of being the best-selling non-Nintendo handheld gaming system.[12]


A crowdfunded console, the Ouya, received $8.5 million in preorders before launching in 2013. Post-launch sales were poor, and the device was a commercial failure. The business was wound down due to financial problems and sold to Razer Inc., which discontinued the Ouya in July 2015. Additionally, microconsoles like Nvidia Shield Console, Amazon Fire TV, MOJO, Razer Switchblade, GamePop, GameStick, Ouya, and even more powerful PC-based Steam Machine consoles have attempted to compete in the video game console market; however, even though some of these machines are theoretically powerful on paper, they are seldom classified as "seventh generation", "eighth generation", or any generation consoles.[13][14][15]


The seventh generation slowly began to wind down when Nintendo began cutting back on Wii production in the early 2010s by discontinuing the original Wii model in the Western world in 2011, then discontinuing the system altogether in Japan in October 2013. Nintendo ceased production of its Family Edition around the same time,[16] leaving the Wii Mini as its only surviving variant as of 2014. Shortly afterwards, Sony announced they were discontinuing the production of the PSP worldwide that year, following an earlier announcement from Nintendo that it had discontinued its original line of NDS family devices to move onto the Nintendo 3DS line, while continuing to support the Nintendo DSi. Microsoft then announced, in 2016, that they would discontinue, but continue to support, the Xbox 360 at the end of April, making it the first seventh-generation console to cease production altogether. The following year, Sony announced that it would soon discontinue its PS3 line in Japan,[17] and, within a matter of months, in the rest of the world. Around that time, 2017, the Wii Mini and the Nintendo DSi were also discontinued, marking the complete and final end to the Wii consoles and DS line. In late 2018, the last game for the Wii, Just Dance 2019, was released, effectively ending the seventh generation.[18] The eighth generation had already began in early 2011, with the release of the Nintendo 3DS.


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Contents






  • 1 Home consoles


    • 1.1 Wii


    • 1.2 Xbox 360


    • 1.3 PlayStation 3


    • 1.4 Comparison


      • 1.4.1 Sales standings


      • 1.4.2 Discontinuations and revisions


      • 1.4.3 Backward compatibility


      • 1.4.4 HDTV-capable video support and service


      • 1.4.5 Reliability






  • 2 Handheld systems


    • 2.1 Handheld comparison




  • 3 Other systems


    • 3.1 Home consoles


    • 3.2 Handhelds


    • 3.3 Resembles




  • 4 Cloud gaming/Gaming on demand services


  • 5 Software


    • 5.1 Milestone titles




  • 6 See also


  • 7 Notes


  • 8 References







Home consoles



Wii




The Wii and the Wii Remote




The Wii controller uses motion-sensing technology that enables the user to control game actions by moving the entire controller. For example, in the Wii Sports game baseball, the user holds the controller and swings it at the video image of a ball.



Nintendo entered this generation with a new approach embodied by its Wii. The company planned to attract current hardcore and casual gamers,[19] non-gamers,[20] and lapsed gamers by focusing on new gameplay experiences and new forms of interaction with games rather than cutting edge graphics and expensive technology.[21] This approach was previously implemented in the portable market with the Nintendo DS.[22] Nintendo expressed hope that the new control schemes it had implemented would render conventionally controlled consoles obsolete, leading to Nintendo capturing a large portion of the existing market as well.[23] This strategy paid off, with demand for the Wii outstripping supply throughout 2007.[24] Since Nintendo profited on each console right from the start unlike its competitors,[25] it achieved very positive returns.[26] With only a few exceptions, monthly worldwide sales for the Wii were higher than those of the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3,[27][28][29] eroding Microsoft's early lead and widening the gap between its market share and Sony's.[22] On September 12, 2007, it was reported by the British newspaper Financial Times that the Wii's sales surpassed those of the Xbox 360, which had been released one year previously, and became the market leader in worldwide home console sales for the generation.[30]


As in previous generations, Nintendo provided strong support for its new console with popular first-party franchises like Mario, The Legend of Zelda, Metroid, and Pokémon, among others. To appeal to casual and non-gamers, Nintendo developed a group of core Wii games, consisting of Wii Sports, Wii Play, Wii Fit,[31] and Wii Music,[32] where players make use of the motion-sensing abilities of the console and its peripherals to simulate real world activities.[33] With the exception of Wii Music, the games and their sequels have all been highly successful.


Publishers such as Ubisoft, Electronic Arts, Capcom, and Majesco Entertainment continued to release exclusive titles for the console, but the Wii's strongest titles remained within its first-party line-up. Analysts speculated that this would change in time as the Wii's growing popularity persuaded third-party publishers to focus on it;[28][34] however, some third party developers expressed frustration at low software sales.[35]Goichi Suda, developer of No More Heroes for the Wii, noted that "only Nintendo titles are doing well. This isn't just because of the current situation in Japan, as this is happening outside Japan. I am very surprised about the reality about Wii, because before I was making this game, I wasn't expecting that Wii would be a console targeted only for non-gamers. I expected more games for hardcore gamers. The reality is different to what I expected."[36] Conversely, the PAL publisher of No More Heroes Rising Star Games were greatly impressed with the game's sales.[37] Goichi Suda later retracted his comment, saying his "point was that No More Heroes, unlike a lot of Nintendo Wii titles currently available is the kind of product that will attract a different kind of consumer to the hardware, i.e. gamers who are looking for a different genre to the products that have been successful on this platform thus far."[38]


In early 2008, the NPD Group revealed sales data showing that, while the Wii's life-to-date attach rate was low, in December 2007, it reached 8.11—higher than the attach rates for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 in that month.[39] The Wii's low overall attach rate could be explained by reference to its rapidly increasing installed base, as financial analysts have pointed to the Xbox 360's high attach rates as indicative of an unhealthy lack of installed base growth, and warned that what actually benefits third-party developers is "quicker adoption of hardware and a rapidly growing installed base on which to sell progressively more game units," which tends to lower the attach rate of a product.[40]


On September 23, 2009, Nintendo announced its first price drops for the console. In the United States, the price was reduced by fifty dollars, resulting in a new Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price (MSRP) of $199.99, effective September 27, 2009.[41] For Japan, the price dropped from ¥25,000 to ¥20,000, effective October 1, 2009.[42] In Europe (with the exception of the United Kingdom), the price of a Wii console dropped from €249 to €199.[43] On May 3, 2010, Nintendo announced that Wii consoles sold in the Americas now would include Wii Sports Resort and Wii MotionPlus, effective May 9, 2010.[44] Since May 15, 2011, the Wii Console is US$149.99 and comes bundled with Mario Kart Wii.



Xbox 360




The Xbox 360 Pro console and controller.



Microsoft Xbox 360 gained an early lead in terms of market share, largely due to its established Xbox Live online gaming system, and its early launch date, which was one year before its rivals. Sales in North America and Europe have continued to be strong, even after the release of the Wii and PlayStation 3. Like its predecessor, the Xbox 360 received a muted reception in Japan,[45] attributed to the lack of content aimed at Japanese gamers.[46]


This early launch did come with some trouble, as technical problems appeared in a portion of Xbox 360 units sold. The most well-known problem is the "red ring of death" and Error E74, which received a great deal of attention due to some users having to replace their consoles multiple times. Microsoft attempted to address this by offering a three-year warranty on all affected consoles and repairing them free of charge.[47] It also retroactively reimbursed owners of affected systems who paid for repairs.[47] According to The Mercury News, new models of the console featuring 65-nanometer technology will address this and other issues; the new technology is expected to reduce heat production, which will lower the risk of overheating and system failures; although, this has never been officially confirmed by Microsoft.[48]


As they share many cross-platform games and compete for the same audience as their predecessors, frequent comparisons are made between the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.[49] The PS3 uses the Blu-ray format, while the Xbox 360 uses a standard DVD9. The Xbox 360 is less expensive to produce, and analysts expect that a mid-revision will allow Microsoft to break-even on manufacturing costs,[50][51] while industry consensus is that the Xbox 360's conventional architecture is easier to develop for.[52][53]


At the end of first half of 2007, the console stabilized at 11.6 million units shipped as sales dropped 60% while its rival, Wii, gained momentum and Sony announced a competitive price drop on the PlayStation 3.[54][55] Microsoft's strategy to boost sales with the release of the highly anticipated Halo 3 in September 2007 paid off, outselling the Wii that month in North America.[27] Microsoft's Entertainment and Devices Division experienced a huge increase in revenue, largely driven by the release of Halo 3, and posted a quarterly profit for the first time in two years.[56]


The Xbox 360's advantage over its competitors owes itself to the release of high-profile games, such as additions to the Halo franchise. The 2007 Game Critics Awards honored the platform with 38 nominations and 12 wins – more than any other platform.[57][58] By March 2008, the Xbox 360 had reached a software attach rate of 7.5 games per console in the US; the rate was 7.0 in Europe, while its competitors were 3.8 (PS3) and 3.5 (Wii), according to Microsoft.[59] At the 2008 Game Developers Conference, Microsoft announced that it expected over 1,000 games available for Xbox 360 by the end of the year.[60] The Xbox 360 has managed to gain a simultaneous release of titles that were initially planned to be PS3 exclusives, including Devil May Cry,[61]Ace Combat,[62]Virtua Fighter,[63]Grand Theft Auto IV,[64]Final Fantasy XIII,[65]Tekken 6,[66]Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance,[67] and L.A. Noire.[68]


In August 2007, the first price drop was announced for all Stock Keeping Units (SKU's) of the Xbox 360.[69] The Core system's price was reduced in the United States by $20, the Premium by $50, and the Elite model by $30.[69] Also, the HDMI port, previously exclusive to the Elite system, was added to new models of the Premium and Arcade systems; the Core system was discontinued.[70]


At E3 2010, Microsoft revealed a new US$299.99 Xbox 360 SKU known officially as the Xbox 360 S and referred to as the "Slim" by various media outlets. It replaced the Elite and comes with an integrated 802.11n WLAN adapter, integrated TOSLINK port, 5 USB ports and a 250 GB HDD. It also does not require an additional power supply to make use of Microsoft Kinect motion control accessory. A US$199.99 version was released on August 3, 2010 in the US which replaced the Arcade model. It has 4 GB and a 250 GB model of internal memory, it has a matte or glossy finish and it comes with a headset. At E3 2013 Microsoft revealed the Xbox 360 E, the final iteration of the Xbox 360 series, to be succeeded by Xbox One. The Xbox 360 E was originally priced at US$199.99 for a 4GB model, and US$299.99 for the 250GB model.[71] The 360 E featured a new square design with a simplified exterior akin to the Xbox One.[72]



PlayStation 3





Silver PlayStation 3 consoles on display in 2006.


Sony Computer Entertainment PlayStation 3 was released on November 11, 2006 in Japan and November 17, 2006 in the US and Canada. The system's reliance on new technologies such as the Cell microprocessor and Blu-ray format caused difficulties in manufacturing, especially the Blu-ray diode, leading to shortages at launch and the delay of the PAL region launches; however, by early December 2006, Sony announced that all production issues had been resolved.[73] Market analysts[74] and Sony executives noted that the success of the PlayStation 3 and the Blu-ray format were dependent on each other; Rich Marty, VP of New Business Development at Sony Pictures Home Entertainment stated that the "PS3 is critical to the success of Blu-ray,"[75] while Phil Harrison stated that the PlayStation 3's success would be ensured because "the growth of the Blu-ray Disc movie market ... is a positive factor which will play more into the consumer psyche ... as more consumer electronics firms launch standalone disc players, as more Blu-ray Disc movies become available, and as more shelf space is dedicated to the category at retail."[76]


Sony would provide support for its console with new titles from acclaimed first-party franchises such as Gran Turismo, Team Ico, and God of War, and secured a number of highly anticipated third-party exclusive titles, including Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots, Yakuza 3 and Valkyria Chronicles. Titles that were originally exclusive or recognized with the platform, such as Devil May Cry,[61]Ace Combat,[62]Virtua Fighter,[63] and Monster Hunter,[77] have been released on other platforms. The previous Grand Theft Auto titles were originally timed exclusives on the PlayStation 2, before making their release on other platforms, such as the Xbox, months later; however, Grand Theft Auto IV, the latest installment, was released simultaneously on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.[64] Announced exclusives titles for the PlayStation 3 such as Assassin's Creed;[78]Bladestorm: The Hundred Years' War, and Fatal Inertia were released on Xbox 360 as well, with the latter making its release on Xbox 360 before the PlayStation 3 version.[79]


The Katamari series, which has long been PlayStation 2 exclusives, found one of the more recent installments, Beautiful Katamari, exclusive to Xbox 360.[80] These releases fueled rumors and fear that Final Fantasy XIII and Tekken 6, two highly anticipated exclusive PlayStation 3 games at the time, would also be available for Xbox 360, the PlayStation 3's primary competitor[81][82][83][84][85] and at E3 2008, it was announced that Final Fantasy XIII would be simultaneously released on the Xbox 360 in Europe and North America;[65] later on October 8, 2008, it was announced that Tekken 6 would also be releasing on the Xbox 360.[66][86] After the multiplatform releases of these games, the fifth installment of the Metal Gear series, Metal Gear Solid: Rising, has also been announced for the Xbox 360; L.A. Noire, which was announced as an exclusive since the beginning of its development, has also been released for the Xbox 360; Dark Souls, the spiritual successor to Demon's Souls, has also been released on Xbox 360; the Persona series, which has a long history of being PlayStation exclusive, found the seventh generation installment, Persona 4 Arena multiplatform; however, Metal Gear Solid 4, Yakuza 3, Tekken 5: Dark Resurrection ONLINE, and Disgaea 3: Absence of Justice still remain PlayStation 3 exclusives.[87][88][89][90][91] Sony has blamed lower-than-expected sales, loss of exclusive titles in the PlayStation 3 software library, its higher price, and stock shortages.[92][93][94]


The high launch price of the PlayStation 3 was considered a major drag on its popularity.[95] In July 2007, Sony announced a drop in the price of the console by $100.[96] This measure only applied to the 60 GB models and was exclusive to the United States and Canada, where those models are no longer in production.[97] On October 18, 2007, Sony announced a US$100 price drop for the 80 GB model and a new US$399 40 GB model to launch on November 2, 2007[98] with reduced features such as the removal of backward compatibility with PS2 games. Within weeks, Sony announced that sales of the 40 GB and 80 GB models by major retailers had increased 192%.[99] In November 2008, Sony launched a $499 160 GB model,[100] and on August 18, 2009, Sony announced the PS3 Slim. The PS3 slim sold 1 million in under a month. It was then announced that a 250GB slim model was to be released. It was released on September 1 (or 3 depending on country) and costs $299, £249 and €299.[101] In Australia the console will cost A$499, which is A$200 less than the standard PS3.[102] In September 2009, a $299 120 GB Slim Model was released. A $349 250 GB Model was later released later in 2009. In August 2010, the 160 GB Slim Model was released for $299. The same price for a 120 GB PS3 slim Model. In Japan, the 160GB slim model is also available in white.[103] On September 17, 2010, Sony released the 320 GB Slim Model, but it only sold with the PlayStation Move for US$399.99.


In September 2012, Sony announced a new slimmer PS3 redesign (CECH-4000), commonly referred to as the "Super Slim" PS3. It was released in late 2012 it became available with either a 250 GB or 500 GB hard drive. The "Super Slim" model was the last model to be produced by Sony before the system was slowly discontinued around the world. Shipments of new units to the United States were terminated in October 2016 and Sony officially discontinued the system in Japan on May 29, 2017, the last territory where it was selling new units up until then.[104][105]



Comparison








































































































































































































Name

Xbox 360

PlayStation 3

Wii
Manufacturer

Microsoft

Sony

Nintendo
Image(s)

Xbox-360-Pro-wController.pngXbox-360S-Console-Set.jpgMicrosoft-Xbox-360-E-wController.jpg

Sony-PlayStation-3-CECHA01-wController-L.jpgSony-PlayStation-3-2001A-wController-L.jpgSony-PlayStation-3-4001B-wController-L.jpg

Wii-Console.pngWii-Mini-Console-Set-H.jpg

Top or Left: An original model Xbox 360 Premium and controller
Middle: A redesigned model Xbox 360 S and controller
Bottom or Right: The latest model Xbox 360 E and controller

Top or Left: An original model PlayStation 3
Middle: A "slim" model PlayStation 3 and DualShock 3 controller
Bottom or Right: A "super slim" model PlayStation 3

Top or Left: An original model Wii and Wii Remote
Bottom or Right: A Wii Mini and Wii Remote Plus
Release dates



  • NA: November 22, 2005


  • EU: December 2, 2005


  • JP: December 10, 2005


  • AU: March 23, 2006

More...



  • JP: November 11, 2006


  • NA: November 17, 2006


  • PAL: March 23, 2007

More...



  • NA: November 19, 2006


  • JP: December 2, 2006


  • AU: December 7, 2006


  • EU: December 8, 2006

More...
United States launch prices

US$299.99 (Core) (discontinued)

US$399.99 (Premium – 20 GB) (discontinued)

US$249.99 (Premium – 60 GB) (discontinued)

US$479.99 (Elite) (120 GB) (discontinued)

US$299.99 (Arcade – 256 MB internal memory) (discontinued)

US$199.99 (Arcade – 512 MB internal memory) (discontinued)

US$299.99 ("Super Elite") (250 GB) (discontinued)

US$399.99 (Xbox 360 S – 250 GB + Kinect)

US$299.99 (Xbox 360 S – 250 GB)

US$299.99 (Xbox 360 S – 4 GB internal memory + Kinect)

US$199.99 (Xbox 360 S – 4 GB internal memory) (discontinued)

US$199.99 (Xbox 360 E – 4 GB internal memory)





US$499.99 (20 GB)[106](discontinued)

US$599.99 (60 GB)[106] (discontinued)

US$499.99 (2nd gen 80 GB)[107][108](discontinued)

US$399.99 (40 GB)[109](discontinued)

US$399.99 (3rd gen 80 GB) (discontinued)

US$499.99 (160 GB) (discontinued)

US$299.99 (120 GB "Slim") (discontinued)

US$249.99 (160 GB "Slim")[110]

US$349.99 (250 GB "Slim")[111](discontinued)

US$299.99 (320 GB "Super Slim") (discontinued)

US$199.99 (Slim – 12 GB internal memory)

US$249.99 (500 GB "Super Slim")

US$199.99 (Super Slim – 250 GB internal memory)





US$249.99 (white console with Wii Sports included) (discontinued)

US$199.99 (white console or black console with Wii Sports, Wii Sports Resort and Wii MotionPlus included; red console packaged with Wii Sports and New Super Mario Bros. Wii)[44] (discontinued)

US$149.99 (white console or black console with Mario Kart Wii and Wii Remote Plus, removes GameCube support) (discontinued)

US$99.99 (Wii Mini, black and red console with red Wii Remote and Nunchuk, no pack-in game, removes online game support)(discontinued)[112]


Japan launch prices

¥27,800(Arcade 256 MB internal memory) (discontinued)

¥27,800 (Arcade 512 MB internal memory) (discontinued)

¥29,000 (Core) (discontinued)

¥39,795 (Premium) (20 GB) (discontinued)

¥29,800 (Premium) (60 GB) (discontinued)

¥47,800 (Elite) (discontinued)



¥49,980 (20 GB)[106](discontinued)

¥59,980 (60 GB) (discontinued)

¥39,980 (40 GB)[113](discontinued)

¥49,980 (80 GB) (discontinued)

¥39,980 (3rd gen 80 GB)[106](discontinued)



¥25,000 (white console)

¥25,000 (black console)[114]

¥33,000 (black console with Monster Hunter Tri and Classic Controller Pro included)[115]


Europe launch prices

€179/ £199.99 (Arcade 256 MB internal memory) (discontinued)

€179 / £199.99 (Arcade 512 MB internal memory) (discontinued)

€299.99 / £209.99 (Core) (discontinued)

€399.99 / £279.99 (Premium) (discontinued)

£299.99 (Elite) (discontinued)

€249.99 / £199.99 (Xbox 360 S – 250 GB)[116]

€199.99 / £149.99 (Xbox 360 S – 4 GB)[117]



€399.99 / £299.99 (40 GB) (discontinued)

€599.99 / £424.99 (60 GB) (discontinued)

€399.99 / £299.99 (3rd gen 80 GB) (discontinued)

€299.99 / £249.99 (120 GB "Slim") (discontinued)

€249.99 / £249.99 (160 GB "Slim")
£184.99 (12 GB "Super Slim")
£249.99 (500 GB "Super Slim")



€249.99 / £179.99 (white console with Wii Sports included)

€199.99 / £179.99 (black console with Wii Sports Resort and Wii MotionPlus included)[118]

€149.99 / £179.99 (white console with Wii Sports and Wii Party included)


Discontinued


  • WW: April 20, 2016[119]




  • NZL: September 29, 2015[120]


  • NA: October 2016


  • JP: May 29, 2017[note 1]


Original Model:

  • WW: October 21, 2013[121]


Media
DVD-DL

Blu-ray Disc

Wii Optical Disc (proprietary DVD-DL)

Best-selling game

Kinect Adventures (pack-in with Kinect peripheral), 24 million[122]
Best selling non-bundled game: Grand Theft Auto V, 15.34 million[123]



Grand Theft Auto V, 17.27 million[124]



Wii Sports (pack-in, except in Japan), 82.83 million (As of 30 September 2017)[125]
Best selling non-bundled game: Mario Kart Wii (37.02 million)(As of 30 September 2017)[125]



CPU
3.2 GHz IBM PowerPC tri-core codenamed "Xenon"

Cell Broadband Engine (3.2 GHz Power ISA 2.03-based PPE with seven 3.2 GHz SPEs)
729 MHz PowerPC based IBM "Broadway"[126]

GPU
500 MHz codenamed "Xenos" (ATI custom design)
550 MHz RSX 'Reality Synthesizer'[127] (based on NVIDIA G70 architecture)[128]
243 MHz ATI "Hollywood"
Memory
512 MB GDDR3 @ 700 MHz shared between CPU & GPU
10 MB EDRAM GPU frame buffer memory
256 MB XDR @ 3.2 GHz
256 MB GDDR3 @ 650 MHz
24 MB "internal" 1T-SRAM integrated into graphics package
64 MB "external" GDDR3 SDRAM
3 MB GPU frame buffer memory
Dimensions

Original: 310 × 80 × 260 mm (12.2 × 3.2 × 10.2 in)[129]

Xbox 360S: 270 × 75 × 264 mm (10.6 × 3.0 × 10.4 in)[130]



Original: 325 × 98 × 274 mm (12.8 × 3.9 × 10.8 in)[131]

Slim: 290 × 65 × 290 mm (11.4 × 2.6 × 11.4 in)[132]



4.4 × 16 × 21.5 cm (1,513.6 cm3) / 1.7 × 6.3 × 8.5 in (92.4 in3)[133]


Weight


Original: 3.5 kg (7.7 lb)[129]

Xbox 360S: 2.9 kg (6.4 lb)[130]



Original: 5 kg (11 lb)[131][134]

Slim (2009): 3.2 kg (7.1 lb)[132]

Slim (2011): 2.6 kg (5.7 lb)[135]
Super Slim (2012): 2.08 kg (4.6 lb)[136]



1.2 kg (2.6 lb)[137]


Included accessories[a]


  • Controller:

    • Wired (Core model only)

    • Wireless controller (all models except Core)[note 1]



  • Wired headset (all models except Core, Arcade and 4 GB Xbox 360 S consoles)

  • AV cable:

    • Composite AV cable (all models except Pro/Premium and pre-Sept 2009 Elite)

    • Component HD AV cable (Pro/Premium and pre-Sept 2009 Elite only)[note 2]




  • Ethernet cable (Pro/Premium and pre-Sept 2009 Elite only)


  • HDMI cable and audio adapter (pre-Sept 2009 Elite only)

  • Removable storage:

    • Various removable hard disk drives, size dependent on SKU (all models except Core, Arcade and 4 GB Xbox 360 S consoles)

    • 256 MB Memory Unit (some Arcade models only, later replaced with on-board (non-removable) storage)





^note 1 250 GB "Super Elite" consoles come with 2 Wireless controllers. 320 GB Xbox 360 S consoles come with a "transforming d-pad" controller.
^note 2 replaced with the D-Terminal HD AV Cable (D 端子 HD AV ケーブル) in Japan




  • Controller:


    • Sixaxis wireless controller (1st, 2nd, and 3rd (40 GB) generation only)


    • DualShock 3 wireless controller (3rd (80 GB, 160 GB) and 4th generation)




  • USB A → mini-B cable

  • AV cable (composite video/stereo audio)

  • Ethernet Cable 1st generation (20GB and 60GB)




  • Composite AV cable


  • Wii Remote controller and Nunchuk attachment

  • Sensor Bar

  • Console stand and plate


Accessories (retail)

see Xbox 360 accessories



see PlayStation 3 accessories




  • Wii Remote

  • Composite AV cable

  • RGB Scart cable

  • Component AV cable

  • D-Terminal cable

  • S-Video Cable

  • Wired LAN adapter

  • Wii Wheel

  • Wii Zapper

  • Classic Controller

  • Classic Controller Pro




Controller[b]



  • Xbox 360 controller (up to 4; any combination of wired or wireless)

  • Xbox 360 Wireless Racing Wheel


  • Big Button Controller/Scene It Trivia Controller (up to 8)


  • Xbox Live Vision Camera

  • Xbox 360 Universal Media Remote


  • Kinect Motion sensor





  • Sixaxis/DualShock 3 controller (up to 7 via Bluetooth or USB)


  • PSP or PS Vita via Wi-Fi* or USB (supported titles only)


  • PlayStation Eye camera


  • Buzz!: Quiz TV wireless buzzers


  • PlayStation Move motion controller

  • PS3 Bluetooth Blu-ray remote

  • Various generic USB HIDs, including keyboards, mice and game controllers





  • Wii Remote (up to 4 via Bluetooth)


  • Wii MotionPlus attachment


  • Nunchuk attachment

  • Classic Controller


  • GameCube controller with selected Wii games, all GameCube and Virtual Console games (up to 4)


  • GBA via Link Cables


  • Nintendo DS (via Wi-Fi)

  • Wii Balance Board

  • Wii Zapper


User interface

Xbox 360 Dashboard
New Xbox Experience (NXE)

XrossMediaBar (XMB)

Wii Menu
System software
features


  • Audio file playback (non-DRM AAC, MP3, WMA)

  • Video file playback (MPEG4, WMV, DivX, XviD[138])

  • Image slideshows

  • Connectivity with Windows PCs for more codec support and external playback (compatible natively with Windows XP Media Center Edition and Windows Vista, with Windows XP with downloadable utility)[139]

  • Keyboard support




  • Audio file playback (ATRAC3, AAC, MP3, MP3 Surround, WAV, WMA)

  • Video file playback (MPEG1, MPEG2, MPEG4, WMV, DivX, XviD)

  • Image editing and slideshows (JPEG, GIF, PNG, TIFF, BMP)

  • Connectivity with DLNA compliant servers

  • Mouse and keyboard support


  • Folding@home client with visualizations from the RSX




  • Audio file playback (Previously MP3, now only AAC)

  • Video file playback (Motion JPEG)[140]

  • Image editing and slideshows (JPG)

  • Keyboard support[141]



Backward compatibility

465 Selected Xbox games (as of November 2007). Additions made with software updates. Official Xbox hard drive required.
The first generation model is backwards compatible with PS1 and PS2 titles through the inclusion of the Emotion Engine and Graphics Synthesizer chips.[142]

The second generation model offers less backward compatibility for PS2 titles. Owing to only featuring the Graphics Synthesizer, and having to emulate the CPU.[143]

Third and later generation models dropped support for all PS2 titles via disc, but some games in digital format, marketed as "PS2 Classics" via the PlayStation Store are still compatible via software emulation.[144]
All PS3 models will play most PS1 discs regardless of PS2 compatibility.


Supports all Nintendo GameCube software and most accessories.

The "Family Edition" and "Mini" models drops support for GameCube games.[145]


Online servicesd

Xbox Live
Xbox Live Arcade
Xbox Live Marketplace
Xbox Live Vision (webcam), headset
Xbox Live Video Marketplace
Windows Live Messenger
Internet Explorer (Xbox Live Gold not needed)
VideoKinect (Kinect sensor is needed)



Remote Play
PlayStation Network
PlayStation Store
Internet browser (Flash enabled)
Video chat using PlayStation Eye camera or other USB webcam
What's New
PlayStation Home
Life with PlayStation
Facebook
PlayStation Plus



Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection
WiiConnect24
Internet Channel (web browser)
News Channel
Forecast Channel
Everybody Votes Channel
Wii Shop Channel
Check Mii Out Channel
Nintendo Channel
Wii no Ma (Japan only)
Wii Speak Channel (Available only with purchase of Wii Speak)
Food Delivery Channel (Japan only)
TV Guide Channel (Japan only)
Today and Tomorrow Channel (Japan and UK only)
Everybody Loves Theatre Channel (Japan only)
Homebrew Channel (Non-official software)


Video and entertainment services

4oD* (UK Only; Xbox Live Gold required)
AT&T U-verse (North America only, separate subscription required)
BBC iPlayer (UK Only)
blinkbox* (UK Only; Xbox Live Gold required)
Canal+ (FR Only(?); Xbox Live Gold required, separate subscription required)
CanalSat (FR Only(?); Xbox Live Gold required, separate subscription required)
CanalPlay (FR Only(?); Xbox Live Gold required, separate subscription required)
Dailymotion* (Xbox Live Gold required)
Demand 5* (UK Only; Xbox Live Gold required)
ESPN (North America only, Xbox Live Gold subscription required)
Foxtel (Australia only, Xbox Live Gold subscription required)
Hulu Plus (North America only, separate subscription required)
Last.fm
LoveFilm (UK only, separate subscription required)
MSN*
MUZU TV* (UK Only; Xbox Live Gold required)
Netflix (North America, UK, and Republic of Ireland only, separate subscription required)

PLUS 7 (Australia only)
Sky Go* (UK Only; Xbox Live Gold and separate subscription required)
Telus Optik TV (Canada only, separate subscription required)
Twitch
Vodafone Casa TV (Portugal only, separate subscription required)
YouTube*
Zune

*"Twist Control" update is needed. See 'User Interface'



4oD (UK only, via internet browser)[146]
ABC iview (Australia only)
Amazon Video (North America only)
Access (UK only)
BBC iPlayer (UK only)[147]
Crackle
Crunchyroll (North America only)
Hulu Plus (North America only, separate subscription required)
ITV/STV/UTV Player (UK only, via internet browser)[146]
Laugh Factory Live (North America only)
LoveFilm (UK only, separate subscription required)[148]
MLB.tv (North America only, separate subscription required)[149]
MUBI (Europe only, separate subscription required)[150]
Music Unlimited (separate subscription required)[151]
Neon Alley (North America only)
NHL Gamecenter (North America only, separate subscription required)
NFL Sunday Ticket (North America only, separate subscription required)
Netflix (North America, UK, Republic of Ireland, and Australia only, separate subscription required)[152]

PLUS 7 (Australia only)
Qore (North America only)
SEC Digital Network (North America only, separate subscription required)
TVNZ ondemand (New Zealand only, via internet browser)[153]
Video Unlimited (separate subscription required)
VidZone (Europe, Australia & New Zealand only)
Vudu (separate subscription required)

YouTube (North America only)



BBC iPlayer (UK only)
Hulu Plus (North America only, separate subscription required)

Kirby TV (Europe only)
Netflix (North America, UK and Republic of Ireland, separate subscription and Internet Channel required)[152]

Nintendo Channel

Television Friend Channel (Japan only)
Wii no Ma (Japan only, It ceased operations on April 30, 2012)

YouTube


Crunchyroll[154]


Consumer programmability
Development on PC with XNA Game Studio ($99/year subscription, binary distribution with XNA 1.0 Refresh)[155]
Featured development on console (excluding RSX graphics acceleration) via free Linux platform or PC (excluding all Slim models and any console updated to firmware 3.21 and later)

Homebrew Channel (Unofficial)

I/O

IrDA-compliant infrared for remote

2 Memory Card slots*

3 USB 2.0 ports**

1 Ethernet port

*Discontinued on Slim models

**5 USB 2.0 ports on Slim models



Bluetooth 2.1 EDR

4 USB 2.0 ports*

1 Gigabit Ethernet port

1 Memory Stick slot Pro/Duo**

1 SD/mini SD port**

1 Compact Flash port**


*2 USB 2.0 ports on 3rd gen and 4th gen (slim) models

**60 GB and 2nd gen 80 GB models only



Bluetooth 2.0

2 USB 2.0 ports

Four controller and two memory card ports (GameCube)

1 SD(HC) Card slot[156][157]


Optical media
12× DVD (65.6–132 Mbit/s), CD
2× BD-ROM (72 Mbit/s), 8× DVD, 24× CD, 2× SACD*
*Compatibility removed in 3rd & 4th gen models

Wii Optical Disc, Nintendo GameCube Game Disc (DVD-Video playback was announced for Japan in 2007, but has not been released)[158]
Video outputs

HDMI 1.2a (on models manufactured after August 2007),[159]VGA (RGBHV),[160]Component/D-Terminal (YPBPR), SCART (RGBS), S-Video, Composite

HDMI 1.3a, Component/D-Terminal (YPBPR), SCART (RGBS), S-Video, Composite

Component/D-Terminal (YPBPR), SCART (RGBS), S-Video, Composite
Resolutions

HDTV-capable (480i, 480p, 576i (50 Hz), 576p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p)
Various monitor resolutions available via VGA and HDMI/DVI (640×480, 848×480, 1024×768, 1280×720, 1280×768, 1280×1024, 1360×768, 1440×900, 1680×1050 & 1920×1080)

HDTV-capable (480i, 480p, 576i, 576p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p)

EDTV-capable (480i, 480p, 576i)
Audio

Dolby Digital, WMA Pro, DTS*, DTS-ES*
*(DVD and HD DVD movies only)

  • 256+ audio channels

  • 320 independent decompression channels

  • 32-bit processing; 48 kHz 16-bit support



Dolby Digital, DTS, Dolby Digital Plus*, Dolby TrueHD*, DTS-HD Master Audio*, DTS-HD High Resolution Audio*,[161]DTS-ES‡, DTS 96/24‡, DTS-ES Matrix†[162]
*DVD and Blu-ray movies only.
‡DVD movies only.
†Blu-ray movies only.

  • Audio mixed by software


Dolby Pro Logic II surround, stereo sound and an additional Mono speaker is built into the controller.
  • Audio mixed by software

Network

100BASE-TX Ethernet
Optional 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi adapter (Built in with the Slim models)

10BASE-T/100BASE-TX/1000BASE-T Ethernet
Built-in 802.11 b/g Wi-fi (all models except 20 GB)
Built-in 802.11 b/g Wi-fi
Optional Ethernet via USB adapter
Storage

Included/Optional* detachable SATA upgradeable 20 GB, 60 GB, 120 GB, 250 GB, 320 GB, or 500 GB hard drive.
Xbox 360 memory cards
USB mass storage
Cloud storage (512MB) (Xbox Live Gold subscription required)
*Premium version includes 20 GB or 60 GB HDD, Elite includes 120 GB HDD, and all HDDs are available for separate purchase.



2.5-inch upgradeable SATA hard drive (upgradeable with any 2.5-inch SATA 1.0 compliant HDD or SSD).
Memory Stick, SD, & Type I/II CompactFlash / Microdrive*
USB mass storage
Cloud storage (2GB) (PlayStation Plus subscription required)
*60 GB and 2nd gen 80 GB models only



512 MB built-in flash memory
SD card (up to 32 GB with 4.0 software)
Nintendo GameCube Memory Cards
The Wii Remote contains a 16 KiB EEPROM chip from which a section of 6 kilobytes can be freely read and written (used to store up to 10 Miis).


Integrated 3DTV support[c]
Yes
Yes
No


^a Game packages not listed. Bundles, special editions and limited editions may include additional or exchanged items.
^b There is a variety of other input devices available for all three consoles, including rhythm game controllers, microphones and third-part gamepads/controllers.
^c All consoles are capable of producing 3D images using anaglyph or frame-compatible systems (side-by-side/SbS, top and bottom/TaB), as these do not require any special output hardware. As such, these display modes are dependent on the software being displayed rather than the console.
^d Facebook and Twitter apps for Xbox 360 were retired in October 2012.[163]



Sales standings



Worldwide figures are based on data from the manufacturers. The Canada and the United States figures are based on data from the NPD Group, the Japan figures are based on data from Famitsu/Enterbrain, and the United Kingdom figures are based on data from GfK Chart-Track.
















































Console
Units sold worldwide
Units sold in Australia
Units sold in Canada
Units sold in Japan
Units sold in the US
Units sold in Europe

Wii
101.63 million[164]

(as of June 30, 2015)


2 million[165]
(as of October 2010)
2 million[166]
(as of December 16, 2009)
12.75 million[164]
(as of December 31, 2013)
39 million[167]
(as of February 28, 2011)
25 million[168]
(as of December 2010)

Xbox 360
84.4 million[169]
1.2 million[170]
(as of April 20, 2010 and include sales from New Zealand)

870,000[171]
(as of July 31, 2008)

1.5 million[172]
(as of February 28, 2010)
25.6 million[168]
(as of December 2010)
13.7 million[168]
(as of December 2010)

PlayStation 3
80 million[173]
(as of November 2, 2013)
1.8 million[174]
(as of December 31, 2010)
2 million[175]
(as of October 6, 2010)
11 million[176]
(as of April 11, 2010)
16.9 million[168]
(as of December 2010)
15.7 million[168]
(as of December 2010)
Total
270.56 million
4.2 million
4.4 million
24.0 million
79.8 million
53.4 million


Discontinuations and revisions



  • The PlayStation 3 20 GB was discontinued in North America in April 2007[177] and effectively discontinued in Japan in early 2008.[178]

  • The PlayStation 3 60 GB was discontinued in NTSC territories by September 2007, and replaced with the 80 GB version.[179]

  • The PlayStation 3 60 GB was effectively discontinued for PAL territories in late 2007. When the remaining stock in stores was sold, the 40 GB version served as its replacement.

  • Sony announced before the PS3 launch in Europe that the PlayStation 2's Emotion Engine CPU would be removed from it for cost savings, and all backwards compatibility would be software-based.[180] This is also the same for the 80 GB model launched in the North American market in 2007.[181]

  • An HDMI out port was added to the Premium Xbox 360 in May 2007.[182]

  • The Xbox 360 Core system was discontinued and replaced by the "Arcade" version in October 2007.[183]

  • The price of the Xbox 360 Premium version was dropped to US$299 in North America on July 13, 2008. Supplies of the existing 20 GB model were exhausted by early August and it was replaced by an identical model with a 60 GB HDD at a MSRP of US$349.[184]

  • The PlayStation 3 40 GB was discontinued in all territories in early August 2008 and the new 80 GB version served as its replacement.

  • The Xbox 360 Arcade 256 MB internal memory SKU was discontinued in all territories in early 2009 and a new 512 MB internal memory SKU still named the Xbox 360 Arcade was released.[185]

  • The PlayStation 3 Slim was introduced on August 18, 2009. At US$299, it is US$100 cheaper than the previous model; it is also approximately ⅓ lighter and more energy efficient.[186] The two original PS3 Slim models, priced at US$299.99 and US$349.99 respectively, hold 120/250 GB. These were then superseded by 160 GB and 320 GB models, which are priced at US$249.99 and US$299.99 respectively.

  • The black Wii console was released in Japan on August 1, 2009[114] and in Europe in November 2009.[118]

  • The Wii package for North America has been updated to include a copy of Wii Sports Resort as well as the required Wii MotionPlus accessory to play it, beginning May 9, 2010. The console is also available in black.[44]

  • A special edition red Wii console was released in honor of Super Mario Bros. 25th Anniversary.

  • The Xbox 360 S was announced at E3 2010 by Microsoft. It is a smaller revision of the Xbox 360 hardware, which includes either a built-in 250 GB hard drive or 4 GB of Flash storage, 802.11n Wi-Fi, a TOSLINK connector, 5 USB ports and an AUX connector for the Kinect sensor device.[187]

  • The Wii Family Edition was released on October 23, 2011. It drops support for GameCube games and accessories, and is designed to sit horizontally.[145]

  • The Xbox 360 E was revealed and released at E3 2013 on June 10, 2013.[188] It featured a new slimmer design, that was quieter than previous models.



Backward compatibility


Early models of the Wii are fully backwards compatible with GameCube software and most of its accessories; the Wii Family Edition and the Wii Mini iterations lack GameCube support.[145] Early versions of the PlayStation 3 and all models of the Xbox 360 only offer partial support and use software emulation for backwards compatibility. Current versions of the PS3 do not offer PlayStation 2 compatibility, though PS1 compatibility is retained. Some models of the first generation of the PS3 offered full backwards compatibility for PS2 games. The Xbox 360's compatibility is increased through game-specific patches automatically downloaded from Xbox Live or downloaded and burned to a CD or DVD from the Xbox website[189] and the PS3's compatibility is expanded with firmware updates.


All three consoles provide titles from older consoles for download; the Xbox 360 through the Xbox Originals service, the PlayStation 3 through the PlayStation Store, and the Wii through the Virtual Console. When purchased, the game is saved to console's internal memory or, optionally on the Wii, to an inserted SD/SDHC card. Initially the Xbox 360 also provided Xbox Live support for backwards compatible games, but the service has since been discontinued for original Xbox games. No more games will be added to the list of backwards compatible games for the Xbox 360. In response to the lack of backward compatibility for most PS3s, many popular games have been released for download as PlayStation 2 Classics and other popular series have been updated with gameplay/graphics as high-definition remasters for PlayStation consoles and have been released on Blu-ray Disc or are available for download on the PlayStation Network.



HDTV-capable video support and service


Both the PlayStation 3[190] and the Xbox 360[191] support 1080p high definition video output. However, the output signal may be protected by digital rights management and may require an HDCP-compliant display if HDMI is used. The Xbox Live Marketplace service and the PlayStation Store offer HD movies, TV shows, movie trailers, and clips for download to the console's HDD.[192][193] Other regional PlayStation Stores only allow download of movie trailers and short segment clips. As of November 2009, the Video Download service present on the American PlayStation Store will be available for select European countries.


While only a small number of games render video in native 1080p, many games can be automatically scaled to output this resolution. The Wii is capable of outputting 480p for the Wii Menu and most games through a component cable, which must be purchased separately.



Reliability


In the September 2009 issue of Game Informer magazine, survey results were published in which among nearly 5000 readers who responded, 54.2% of those who owned an Xbox 360 had experienced a console failure for that system, compared with 10.6% for PlayStation 3, and 6.8% for Wii.[194]


In August 2009, warranty provider SquareTrade published console failure rate estimates, in which the proportion of its customers reporting a system failure in the first two years is 23.7% for Xbox 360, 10.0% for PlayStation 3, and 2.7% for Wii.[195]



Handheld systems



For video game handhelds, the seventh generation began with the release of the Nintendo DS on November 21, 2004. This handheld was based on a design fundamentally different from the Game Boy and other handheld video game systems. The Nintendo DS offered new modes of input over previous generations such as a touch screen, the ability to connect wirelessly using IEEE 802.11b, as well as a microphone to speak to in-game NPCs.[196] On December 12, 2004, Sony released its first handheld, PlayStation Portable. The PlayStation Portable was marketed at launch to an above-25-year-old[197] or "core gamer" market,[198] while the Nintendo DS proved to be popular with both core gamers and new customers.[199]


Nokia revived its N-Gage platform in the form of a service for selected S60 devices. This new service launched on April 3, 2008.[200] Other less-popular handheld systems released during this generation include the Gizmondo (launched on March 19, 2005 and discontinued in February 2006) and the GP2X (launched on November 10, 2005 and discontinued in August 2008). The GP2X Wiz, Pandora, and Gizmondo 2 were scheduled for release in 2009.


Another aspect of the seventh generation was the beginning of direct competition between dedicated handheld gaming devices, and increasingly powerful PDA/cell phone devices such as the iPhone and iPod Touch, and the latter being aggressively marketed for gaming purposes. Simple games such as Tetris and Solitaire had existed for PDA devices since their introduction, but by 2009 PDAs and phones had grown sufficiently powerful to where complex graphical games could be implemented, with the advantage of distribution over wireless broadband.


Sony announced in 2014 that they had discontinued the production of the PlayStation Portable worldwide, this follows Nintendo's announcement in 2014 that it had discontinued its original line of DS family devices to move onto the 3DS line.



Handheld comparison











































































































































Product Line

Nintendo DS

PlayStation Portable
Name

Nintendo DS / DS Lite / DSi / DSi XL
PSP-1000 / PSP-2000 / PSP-3000 / PSP Go / PSP-E1000
Manufacturer

Nintendo

Sony (SCE)
Console

Nintendo-DS-Fat-Blue.pngNintendo-DS-Lite-Black-Open.pngNintendo-DSi-Bl-Open.pngNintendo-DSi-XL-Burg.png


Pictured left to right: Nintendo DS, Nintendo DS Lite, Nintendo DSi, Nintendo DSi XL



PSP-1000.pngPSP-2000-trans.pngPSP-3000-Silver.pngPSP-Go-FL-Open.jpgPSP E1000 illustration.svg


Pictured left to right: PSP-1000 series, PSP-2000 series, PSP-3000 series, PSP Go, PSP-E1000 series


Release dates










PSP:


  • JP: December 12, 2004


  • NA: March 24, 2005


  • PAL: September 1, 2005

PSP Go:


  • NA/EU: October 1, 2009


  • JP: November 1, 2009


Launch prices

DS:


Japan: ¥15,000


North America: US$149.99 (equivalent to $199.00 in 2019


Europe: €149.99


UK: £99.99 (equivalent to £147.00 in 2019


DS Lite:



Japan: ¥24,800 (¥26,040 tax incl.)[201]



North America: US$129.99 (equivalent to $162.00 in 2019 / C$299.99 (equivalent to $367.00 in 2019[202]


Europe: €249[202]


UK: £179.99 (equivalent to £256.00 in 2019



PSP-1000 series Pack:

Japan: ¥19,800 (¥20,790 tax incl.)[203]



North America: US$199.99 (equivalent to $257.00 in 2019 / C$229.99 (equivalent to $287.00 in 2019[204]


Europe: €199.99[205]


UK: £179.99 (equivalent to £264.00 in 2019


PSP-2000 series Core Pack:



Japan: ¥19,800[206]



North America: US$169.99 (equivalent to $205.00 in 2019 / C$199.99 (equivalent to $239.00 in 2019[207]


Europe: €169 / £129.99 (equivalent to £177.00 in 2019[208][209]


PSP-3000 series:



North America: US$169.99 (equivalent to $198.00 in 2019 (core package), US$199.99 (equivalent to $233.00 in 2019(bundle package)

PSP Go (PSP-N1000): US$249.99 (equivalent to $292.00 in 2019


Discontinuation
2014[210]
2014[211]
Media

Nintendo DS Game Card, Game Boy Advance cartridge (DS, DS Lite only), SD (HC) Card (DSi only)

Universal Media Disc (UMD) (PSP-1000, PSP-2000, PSP-3000 and PSP-E1000 series only), Memory Stick Duo (PSP-1000, PSP-2000, PSP-3000 series only), Memory Stick Micro (M2), Flash memory (PSP Go only), Content delivery via PSN (All)

Best-selling game

New Super Mario Bros., 30.80 million, all versions combined (as of September 31, 2016)[212]
Nintendogs, 23.96 million (as of September 31, 2016)[212]

Monster Hunter Portable 3rd, 4.8 million (as of January 2016)[213]
Gran Turismo 4.66 million (as of November 26, 2016)[214][215][216]
Included accessories and extras


  • Launch model DS: Stylus, wrist strap, Metroid Prime Hunters demo (not in Japan)

  • DS Lite: Stylus, wrist strap (Japan only)



  • PSP-1000 Value Pack: PSP Case, Hand Strap, 32 MB Memory Stick Pro Duo, Headphones with Remote control

Accessories
(retail)


  • Rumble Pak

  • Nintendo DS Headset

  • Nintendo MP3 Player

  • Nintendo DS Browser

  • Nintendo DS Memory Expansion Pak

  • Nintendo DS Digital TV Tuner

  • More...





  • PSP Camera attachment


  • GPS attachment

  • PSP Extended Battery Pack

  • PSP Portable Travel Case

  • LocationFree Player

  • PSP Microphone

  • PSP Media Manager

  • PSP analog AV cable

  • PSP component cable

  • PSP USB cable



CPU

DS and DSL: 67 MHz ARM9 and 33 MHz ARM7
DSi: 133 MHz ARM9 and 33 MHz ARM7

MIPS R4000-based; clocked from 1 to 333 MHz (2 of these)
Memory

DS and DSL: 4 MB SRAM
DSi: 16 MB

EDRAM (5 MB reserved for kernel, 3 for music)
PSP-1000: 32 MB
PSP-2000, PSP-3000, PSP Go: 64 MB

Interface


  • D-pad

  • Six face buttons

  • Two shoulder buttons

  • Touch screen

  • Microphone

  • 0.3 Megapixel camera & VGA camera (DSi only)




  • D-pad

  • Six face buttons

  • Two shoulder buttons

  • "Home" button ("PS" button on PSP-3000, PSP-E1000 and PSP Go)

  • Analog nub

  • Microphone (PSP-3000 and PSP Go Only)


Dimensions

DS: 148.7 × 84.7 × 28.9 mm (5.85 × 3.33 × 1.13 inches)
DS Lite: 133 × 73.9 × 21.5 mm (5.24 × 2.9 × 0.85 inches)

PSP 1000: 74 mm (2.9 in) (h) 170 mm (6.7 in) (w) 23 mm (0.91 in) (d)
PSP Slim & Lite:71.4 mm (2.81 in) (h) 169.4 mm (6.67 in) (w) 18.6 mm (0.73 in) (d)
PSP Go: 69 mm (2.7 in) (h) 128 mm (5.0 in) (w) 16.5 mm (0.65 in) (d)

Weight


DS: 275 g (9.7 oz)
DSL: 218 g (7.7 oz)
DSi: 214 g (7.5 oz)
DSi XL: 314 g (11.1 oz)

PSP 1000: 280 g (9.9 oz)
PSP Slim & Lite 189 g (6.7 oz)
PSP Go: 158 g (5.6 oz)
Online service

Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, DSi Shop (DSi only), DSi camera(DSi only), DSi sound(DSi only), Internet browser(DSi only), Flipnote Hatena(DSi only), Facebook(DSi XL only)

PlayStation Network, RSS reader, Skype (PSP-2000 series, PSP-3000 series and PSP Go only), PlayStation Store

Internet browser, Digital comics, Remote Play



Backward compatibility

Game Boy Advance (DS, DS Lite only)

PlayStation (downloadable PSone Classics only), TurboGrafx-16/TurboGrafx-CD (via PlayStation Store), Neo Geo (via PlayStation Store)
System software
Nintendo DS Menu (DS, DS Lite), Nintendo DSi Menu (DSi)

XrossMediaBar (XMB)
Consumer programmability
See Nintendo DS homebrew
See PlayStation Portable homebrew
Resolutions
256 × 192 (both screens)
480 × 272
Network
Wi-Fi 802.11b, Wi-Fi 802.11g (DSi only, only functions with DSi-specific software), wireless ad hoc with other DS units and Nintendo Wii
Wi-Fi 802.11b (PSP-1000, PSP-2000, PSP-3000 and PSP Go only), IrDA (PSP-1000 series only), Bluetooth (PSP Go only), wireless ad hoc with other PSP units and PS3
Audio
Stereo speakers, headphone jack
Stereo speakers, headphone jack

I/O
1 Nintendo DS Game Card slot
1 GBA slot (DS, DS Lite only)
1 SD (HC) card slot (DSi Only)
UMD drive (PSP-1000, PSP-2000, PSP-3000 and PSP-E1000 series only)
1 USB device port (proprietary connector on PSP Go, mini-b connector on other models)
1 Memory Stick Duo/PRO Duo slot (Memory Stick Micro (M2) on PSP Go)
1 IrDA (PSP-1000 series only)
Storage
Nintendo DS Game Card, SD (HC) card (DSi only)
Memory Stick Duo/PRO Duo (Memory Stick Micro (M2) on PSP Go), 16 GB flash memory (PSP Go only)
Battery life
DS, backlight on: 14 hours
DS Lite, minimum brightness setting: 15–19 hours[217]
DSi, minimum brightness setting: 9–14 hours[217]
MP3 playback: 10 hours
Game: approximately 3–6 hours
Video playback: 3–7 hours depending on screen brightness setting
Wi-Fi internet browsing: approximately 3–4 hours

Units sold (all models combined)
Worldwide: 154.02 million (as of September 31, 2016)[164]

Japan: 32.99 million (as of December 31, 2013)[164]

United Kingdom: 8.8 million (as of January 3, 2009)[218]

United States: 28 million (as of January 31, 2009)[219]

Australia: 3 million (as of December 2010)[220]


Worldwide: 82 million (as of June 2016)[221]

Japan: 11,078,484 (as of December 28, 2008)[222][223]

United Kingdom: 3.2 million (as of January 3, 2009)[218]

United States: 10.47 million (as of January 1, 2008)[224][225][226]
Australia: 675,000 (as of December 31, 2010)[174]




Note: First year of release is the first year of the system's worldwide availability.



Other systems


There were also other consoles released during the seventh generation time period. Generally, they are either niche products or less powerful.



Home consoles





Game Wave





Zeebo































































Name

Manufacturer
Release date
Notes

EVO Smart Console
Envizions
2006
Can be considered as a Media PC

Zeebo

Zeebo Inc.
2009
Designed for emerging countries. Sold in Mexico, Brazil and China only

HyperScan

Mattel
2006
Designed for children's use

Game Wave

ZAPiT Games
2005
Family-friendly built-in games

Vii
JungleTac
2007
Chinese Wii clone

V.Flash

VTech
2006


V.Smile V-Motion

VTech
2008


V.Smile Baby

VTech
2006


ClickStart

LeapFrog
2007




Handhelds





N-Gage running on Nokia N81





Gizmondo





CAANOO





GP2X Wiz





Pandora











































































Name

Manufacturer
Release date
Notes

N-Gage 2.0 Platform

Nokia
April, 2008
Runs commercial downloadable games

Gizmondo

Tiger Telematics
March, 2005 in UK, Sweden and eventually US
Runs commercial games

digiBlast

Grey Innovation
late 2005
Multimedia system for young children

CAANOO

GamePark Holdings
August 16, 2010
Runs emulators

Fusion: 30-In-1 Portable Arcade

Jungle Soft
2010?
Built-in games

GP2X Wiz

GamePark Holdings
May 12, 2009


Leapster2

LeapFrog Enterprises, Inc.
2008
Educational games

Leapster Explorer

LeapFrog Enterprises, Inc.
2010
Educational games and downloadable apps

Mi2 / PDC Touch

Planet Interactive/Conny Technology/Videojet
November 2009 – Benelux, China, France,
Spain, Germany, United Kingdom, Portugal
Many built-in games

Pandora

OpenPandora
May 2010
Runs on Linux and designed for homebrew

Pelican VG Pocket

Pelican Accessories
August 2006


Released in China only




























Name

Manufacturer
Release date

Dingoo A320

Shenzhen Dingoo Digital Co., Ltd.
March 2009

Ez MINI
Mitac or Mio
2005

Gemei X760+

Gemei
2009

LetCool N350JP

2011

Released in South Korea only













Name

Manufacturer
Release date

GP2X

GamePark Holdings
November 10, 2005


Resembles




Cloud gaming/Gaming on demand services







































Name
Manufacturer
Release date

OnLive
OnLive
June 17, 2010

Gaikai
Gaikai
February 27, 2011

OTOY
OTOY


Playcast Media Systems



G-cluster



Spoon.net




Software



Milestone titles




  • Assassin's Creed II (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Ubisoft Montreal and Ubisoft was met with widespread critical acclaim. Its success spawned two direct sequels, Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood, and Assassin's Creed: Revelations. It garnered Metacritic scores of 91, 90, and 86 respectively.[227][228][229] The game was praised for its stronger emphasis on open-world exploration and interaction, non-linear gameplay and greater mission variety compared to the first Assassin's Creed.


  • Batman: Arkham Asylum (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Rocksteady Studios, Eidos Interactive, and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment has been praised for its innovation, gameplay, and compelling storyline. It won a Guinness World Record for 'Most Critically Acclaimed Superhero Game Ever'. It broke the record in this category by achieving an average score of 91.67 from reviews around the world.[230] Its sequel Batman: Arkham City (PC, PS3, Xbox 360, Wii U) would later become even more critically acclaimed than its predecessor, becoming the highest-rated game of 2011. It received universal acclaim for its narrative, character and world designs, and Batman's combat and navigation abilities and was the recipient of several awards including: Game of the Year, Best Action Game, Best Action Adventure Game, Best Adventure Game, and Best Original Score from different media outlets.


  • Bayonetta (PS3, Xbox 360, PC) by PlatinumGames and Sega received universal critical acclaim,[231] including perfect scores from Famitsu[232] and Edge,[233] and is considered to have surpassed peers in its genre.[233][234][235]


  • BioShock (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Irrational Games and 2K Games is considered a major influential and artistic game of this generation[236][237] with a plot that quickly created controversy with the decisions the player makes during the game–such as making moral choices as to whether to save or kill children.[238]BioShock 2 (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) and BioShock Infinite (PC, PS3, Xbox 360), the franchise's subsequent titles, have received mostly positive reviews from critics and players alike. BioShock Infinite in particular received universal acclaim upon release, with reviews singling out the game's plot and visual aesthetics as the main standouts, becoming the highest rated first-person shooter of 2013. It was also favorably compared to the first BioShock game, with some critics even considering Infinite had surpassed it.


  • Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Infinity Ward and Activision garnered universal critical acclaim[239][240][241] and is considered among the best games in its genre.[242][243][244] With the release of its direct sequel and every single installment up until the launch of the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One,[245] the Call of Duty franchise quickly propelled into the fastest and best selling video game franchise of the seventh generation of video games.


  • Dark Souls (PS3, Xbox 360, PC) by From Software generated universal critical acclaim upon release. Known for its brutally challenging gameplay, critics consider Dark Souls to be one of the most influential and rewarding video games of the seventh console generation.[246][247]


  • Donkey Kong Country Returns (Wii) by Retro Studios and Nintendo generated critical acclaim upon release for its arcade-retro platform style and highly challenging gameplay. It was awarded "Best Retro Design" and "Most Challenging" in 2010 by IGN, and was selected 5th in the top 25 Wii games.


  • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Bethesda Game Studios and Bethesda Softworks was one of the fastest selling games of all times, and one of the most critically acclaimed of this generation. The art style of the game world drew acclaim from many reviewers and it became the highest rated role-playing game of 2011.


  • Gears of War (Xbox 360, PC) by Epic Games and Microsoft Studios had preorder sales that were second only to Halo 2 in the studio's history.[248]Gears of War was also the first Xbox or Xbox 360 game to sell out and reach the top ten charts in Japan.[249] On November 7, 2006—the day that it was released—it became the most popular game on the Xbox Live service, overtaking Halo 2, which had held the spot since its launch in November 2004.[250] By January 19, 2007, just ten weeks after its debut, over three million units of the game had been sold.[251]


  • Grand Theft Auto IV (PS3, Xbox 360, PC) by Rockstar Games is a sandbox-style action-adventure video game developed by Rockstar North. The game received universal acclaim, and was so popular that a few Hollywood producers set precedent by beginning to browse video-game release dates to check for conflicts with movie release dates, due to Grand Theft Auto IV's potential harm to May 2, 2008 release of Iron Man.[252] As of January 2014, the PS3 and Xbox 360 version has taken the fourth and seventh positions of GameRankings' best-rated games of all time, respectively.[253]GTA IV also shattered worldwide weekly sales records of any entertainment media to date by grossing over $500 million within the first week of its release.


  • Grand Theft Auto V (PS3, Xbox 360, PC) as one of the AAA titles to release initially in the seventh generation of video game consoles, it was highly anticipated preceding its release. It was acclaimed by many reviewers who praised the story, presentation and open world gameplay. It broke industry sales records by earning US$800 million in the first 24 hours of its release, and $1 billion within its first three days, making it the fastest selling entertainment product in history.


  • Guitar Hero and Rock Band (Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii), music game franchises which used specially designed controllers that mimicked musical instruments and allowed uses to play a large selection of licensed music, were extremely popular during the seventh generation, with over twenty different title releases across various platforms. Activision's Guitar Hero series sold more than 25 million units with over $2 billion in retail revenue,[254] while Harmonix's Rock Band series has sold over 13 million copies;[255] both series were augmented with a large volume of downloadable content. However, due to saturation of the market in 2009 along with the economic recess, both series have since ceased publishing, though Harmonix has stated they will bring back Rock Band to the eighth-generation when the time is right.[256]


  • Halo 3 (Xbox 360) by Bungie and Microsoft Studios broke many first day records, including preorders (1.7 million+), and first day sales (US$170 million+), surpassing its predecessor, Halo 2, in both of these fields.[257][258] It also featured advanced artificial intelligence (AI) technology for enemies, though the player's allies' intelligence was less refined.[259][260]


  • The Last of Us (PS3) by Naughty Dog and SCE scored over 50 perfect scores from gaming publications. It has been rated as the best PlayStation 3 game of 2013 on Metacritic, and has had one of the biggest launches of the year with 1.3 million sold.[261]


  • The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword (Wii) by Nintendo EAD and Nintendo received perfect scores from at least 30 publications and was praised for its intuitive motion-based swordplay.[262][263]


  • LittleBigPlanet (PS3) by Media Molecule and Sony Computer Entertainment (SCE) was one of the most highly anticipated games of 2008. Upon release, it received high critical acclaim with a score of 95/100 on Metacritic and was the second most highly rated game of that year (behind Grand Theft Auto IV).[264] It was praised by G4 as a game that "not only lives up to the hype but exceeds it so many ways" and IGN called it "nothing short of astounding".[265] Its sequel, LittleBigPlanet 2 was released in 2011 to similar acclaim and is considered an improvement over its predecessor in almost every aspect.


  • Mario Kart Wii (Wii) by Nintendo EAD and Nintendo received highly positive reviews which commended the wide array of characters, tracks, karts, and distinctive online gameplay. Overall, it is the second best-selling game for Wii at 35.53 million copies sold, after Wii Sports as of March 31, 2014.[266]Mario Kart Wii is also the best-selling racing game of all time.[267]


  • Mass Effect 2 (Xbox 360, PC, PS3) by BioWare, the most acclaimed game of the Mass Effect series, set a new standard for expansive yet cohesive storytelling and character development. It remains one of the best reviewed games of the generation (96% on Metacritic for the 360 version)[268] and won numerous awards including the BAFTA and AIAS Game of the Year awards.


  • Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots (PS3) by Kojima Productions and Konami received widespread critical acclaim upon release, receiving a perfect 10 from IGN, GameSpot and numerous other game reviewers. It also got a 94% from Metacritic. The game was a financial driving force for Konami, reaching 5 million units sold in the financial year of 2009. It is often considered one of the best games of the generation by critics and players alike.


  • Monster Hunter Freedom (PSP) and its sequels by Capcom was considered to be the killer app that drove sales of the PlayStation Portable in Japan, taking advantage of the portable unit's to create ad hoc multiplayer groups. The third entry in the portable series, Monster Hunter Portable 3rd, was the PSP's highest-selling game over its lifetime.[269]


  • New Super Mario Bros. Wii (Wii) by Nintendo Entertainment Analysis and Development (Nintendo EAD) and Nintendo received critical acclaim upon release for being the first in the Mario main series since Mario Bros. to feature simultaneous multiplayer gameplay and the first to introduce a four player multiplayer. Overall, it is the fourth best-selling game for Wii at 29.90 million copies sold, as of March 31, 2014. Its critical and commercial success helped revive the 2D platform genre for consoles.


  • Portal and Portal 2 (PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Valve Corporation were critically acclaimed and have sold millions of copies. Both games are often cited as some of the most influential games of the decade for rejuvenating the "first person puzzle" genre and have been selected, along with a few other titles, to be put in the Museum of Modern Art as an example of a work of art in video games.


  • Red Dead Redemption (PS3, Xbox 360) by Rockstar is one of the most critically acclaimed games of 2010. It won numerous Game of the Year Awards and received a 95/100 on the review aggregate site Metacritic.


  • Street Fighter IV (Arcade, PC, PS3, Xbox 360) by Dimps and Capcom garnered universal critical acclaim[270][271][272] and is considered perhaps the finest 2D fighter ever made.[273]


  • Super Mario Galaxy (Wii) by Nintendo Entertainment Analysis and Development (Nintendo EAD) and Nintendo sold more copies in its first week, including over 500,000 in the US, than any other Mario title in the history of the franchise.[274] As of November 2012, Galaxy and its sequel, Super Mario Galaxy 2, are the first and third highest rated games of all time respectively, as listed on GameRankings,[253] along with being the recipients of many game of the year awards.


  • Super Smash Bros. Brawl (Wii) by Sora Ltd. and Nintendo is the first in the series to have third-party characters, with the inclusion of Solid Snake and Sonic the Hedgehog.[275] It dominated sales during its first week in Japan and the United States, selling 820,000 in Japan and becoming the fastest-selling video game in Nintendo of America's history with 1.4 million sold in the US.[276][277][278] The game was critically acclaimed, receiving 93% on Metacritic.


  • Uncharted 2: Among Thieves (PS3) by Naughty Dog and SCE was the most positively reviewed game of 2009[279] and is one of the most critically acclaimed games of the generation. It received universal critical acclaim with a Metacritic score of 96 out of 100, a GameRankings score of 96.38%.[280][281] At E3 2009, Uncharted 2 won the most E3 awards of any game. Critics praised almost every aspect of the game ranging from high quality music and sound to graphics.[282][283]


  • Wii Sports (Wii) by Nintendo EAD and Nintendo has been attributed as a major factor in the Wii's worldwide success.[284] The game, along with Wii Fit, has been cited as attracting a more broad mainstream audience.[285] This is a rarity among seventh generation games, as developers tend to try to attract young men.[286] It has also been cited as one game that can provide a bonding experience among family members,[287] and as a means of exercising and losing weight when played regularly.[288] As of March 31, 2014, the game has sold 82.54 million copies worldwide—including bundled copies, making it the best-selling Wii game and the best-selling video game of all time.[289]





See also





  • Sixth generation of video game consoles (1998–2000s)


  • Eighth generation of video game consoles (2012–)

  • List of video game consoles




Notes





  1. ^ Japan was the last territory where Sony was still selling new PlayStation 3 units until May 29, 2017[104][105]




References





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