News

A reader argues that the games industry does not need Xbox or competition to drive innovation, just well-paid and properly ...
Connecting an external hard drive to your Wii to back up and play your games is a simple way to keep expensive discs out of harms way, decrease game load times, and organize your collection with ...
Wii U games are getting bigger but your Wii U's hard drive isn't. Never fear, we've got the simple solution.
Hard drive? Wii don't need no steenking hard drive! Mike Jackson at CVG takes Nintendo to task (again) for not having a hard drive on the Wii. Nintendo says it's not needed, and they're right.
A patent application has been filed by Nintendo for a system of delivering and navigating Wii games via hard drive. It's really simple, actually: the game disc is ripped to a DVD image, which ...
Nintendo just revealed that Drag x Drive will be available on August 14, exclusively for the recently-released Switch 2 console. The company made this announcement on its Today! news app. For the ...
The Wii, currently, does not have a hard drive. However, Nintendo appears to be considering one since they filed a patent for a process that transfers Wii games to a hard drive.
What are the Best External Hard Drives for Your Wii U? If you're buying digital games on the Wii U, you're going to run out of space soon. Here are some options.
Deluxe bundle will sell for %24299.99 starting Sept. 20 Price is down from %24349.99 Basic bundles of Wii U with 8-GB hard drive will be discontinued With the launches of rival devices Xbox One ...
Have you filled up your Wii's internal memory yet? We have and it's bloody annoying. But while we're all waiting for Nintendo to release a Wii hard drive, the reluctant games giantmaintains ...
Respected games industry trade paper MCV has reported that internet rumours are suggesting Nintendo is preparing to unveil a hard drive device at the forthcoming E3 Expo in LA this July for its ...
Save your Wii games to an external hard drive with this handy tutorial for speedier and scratch-free playback. [Update: Mike's tutorial is no defunct.