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Nokia makes a play for wireless gaming
Nokia makes a play for wireless gaming-October 2024
Oct 22, 2024 11:15 AM

  Nokia has announced an all-in-one "N-Gage" device that will allow a game to be played over a cellular telephone network among several N-Gage users. The device also has a Bluetooth connection, so gamers located within about 10 feet of each other can compete for free without using a costly cellular network. It will run on the Nokia Series 60 platform and the Symbian operating system. Sega has announced that it will create games for the N-Gage, which bears a striking resemblance to the Game Boy Advance, as the picture to the left illustrates.

  The multi-player gaming that N-Gage offers is the next step in cell phone games, said Nokia spokesman Keith Nowak. "You could see this coming," Nowak said. "'Snake' debuted in 1997, then we went to downloading games onto a cell phone, then downloading even more levels for those games. This is part of that evolution."

  The Finnish cell phone maker intends not only to sell and produce the N-Gage device, but also to act as its games publisher. The games will be packaged on memory cards that can be plugged into the phone-console combo, which will come preloaded with five games. The Nokia titles, as well as games from outside publishers, will be released in February. The company did not disclose pricing information for the N-Gage or the games.

  Wireless gaming faces hurdles, chiefly the current speed of wireless networks. N-Gage gamers will use minutes from their calling plans to play. The fastest networks maintained by leading carriers Sprint PCS and Verizon Wireless carry data at about the speed of a dial-up modem, which is too slow for multiplayer gaming, said Jupiter wireless analyst Joe Laszlo.

  Nintendo, which commands 98 percent of the handheld console market with its Game Boy, has a limited wireless gaming offering. Customers of some Japanese carriers, including NTT DoCoMo, can attach their Game Boys to cell phones, which then act as a modem for Web-based play.

  Wireless gaming is supposed to generate $8 billion a year by 2007, according to figures provided by Sega. But so far gaming hasn't taken off even in Europe, where cell phones outnumber computers nearly five to one, according to analysts.

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