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Touch Screen
The Touch Screen is a feature in Nintendo products and a screen with touch-input functionality.
Before Nintendo's Nintendo DS, which introduced the Touch Screen as the bottom screen and a regular screen as the top screen, it was not considered as much as a mainstream product for gaming devices as it is today.
Some Nintendo DS games require exclusive Touch Screen control for actions such as movement, while others such as Super Mario 64 DS, can be controlled with the D-pad as well (with optional touch control for moving the characters around), with other buttons being kept for actions specific to the game such as Mario jumping.
Marketing/business strategy
The Touch Screen was closely linked with a Nintendo marketing branding called Touch! Generations, aimed at an older demographic. The Touch Screen was viewed as innovative and more intuitive to older generations who stereotypically may not have been as familiar with the older means of input on a controller, such as the D-pad, buttons (also including shoulder buttons) or an analog stick.
However, for some users touch-input may be considered as too sensitive, or there may be difficulties pointing at an exact place on the screen (see also: Touch Screen recalibration); hence they may prefer to stick with traditional input from the D-pad. Later Nintendo DS, Nintendo 3DS, and Nintendo Switch games may tend not to use the Touch Screen much at all.
Later, the Wii introduced Motion Control; a newer form of input in Nintendo games. Motion Control is a form of input simply by moving the device around (originally the Wii Remote) leading to the great success of the Wii and the release video game Wii Sports. Like the Touch Screen, the simplicity of Motion Controls lead to their success, however this input method is subject to faults as well.
Nintendo devices with Touch Screens
- Touch Panel Adaptor (Game Boy Color, cancelled)
- Touch Screen (Nintendo DS, Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo Switch)
- Certain official Nintendo games like Super Mario Run are available on modern mobile phones with touch screen technology (also known as smart phones). Nintendo do not currently own their own mobile phone, however they have considered it in the past.
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