YouTube Ending 3DS Support

I got a notification on my 3DS the other day, something that has become a rare occurrence. I was always into the StreetPass stuff and I got excited for a second. Just a second. The notification came from YouTube announcing the company would be discontinuing support for the YouTube app on the Nintendo handheld.

Youtube notice
I just noticed it says “At the end of August…” and it’s September.

 

detective_pika

This shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone. It seems everyone with a voice on the internet has declared the death of the final iteration of the 3DS family. Nintendo hasn’t made such a definitive announcement but with no upcoming releases for the system and the Switch Lite launching on 9/20, it doesn’t take much detective work to put the pieces together.

That doesn’t mean I have to be happy about it. Look, I expected this. It happens with every console and like other consoles I’m not going to stop playing or collecting for this one. The 3DS was special, though. My affinity for handhelds aside, the 3DS (and especially the New 3DS) is an impressive piece of hardware. The home screen alone made this feel like a real console. There were apps for Netflix and YouTube, mini-games that utilized the stereoscopic 3D functionality, and it even looked good. I loved each and every Nintendo handheld leading up to the launch of the 3DS in 2011 but it felt like they were treating it as a console, not just a handheld.

Early sales were rocky but it was an expensive unit. Nintendo dropped the price from $249 to $169 and tossed 10 NES and 10 Game Boy titles via the eShop to anyone who had purchased their system at the original price. That seemed to do the trick, leading to over 70-million units sold over its lifespan. Compare that to the Wii U’s 13-million units sold from 2012 to 2017, it’s clear that the 3DS was doing a lot of the work for a good chunk of time.

I didn’t mean to go on eulogizing like this. I was kind of put off by a lot of seemingly gleeful articles and videos about the end of the 3DS. It’s not that I’m all, “no, the 3DS will never die! Arrrrrrg!” But I am for more quiet reflection of a system that was, and still is, very important to me, as well as to the history of Nintendo. By our nature, people who are into retro games aren’t quick to toss aside outdated hardware because the next generation has a better frame rate or a more powerful processor. One of the many things I find so compelling about Nintendo is their ambition to carve out their own path in a crowded market. While other companies vie for the title of fastest or most powerful, Nintendo challenges itself to be the most fun if not the most interesting. That does a lot for a system’s longevity.

Gunpei Yokoi implemented his “lateral thinking” philosophy with the Game Boy; instead of using state of the art technology, he opted to innovate using “mature” tech which would be well tested and cheaper to produce. Today, Nintendo isn’t the place I go in search of the most impressive graphics. I expect to find excellent game design and hardware that delivers experiences well. The 3DS frequently met those expectations and occasionally exceeded them. Tentpole titles like Animal Crossing: New Leaf, Pokemon: Sun/MoonFire Emblem: Awakening, and many more were as exciting as any home console release and I could take them with me anywhere.

The Switch is an impressive successor, if you can call it that. I’m still not sure. I love my Switch and it goes with me on road trips, but it’s not quite the same. It doesn’t fit in my pocket like the 3DS (I have a smaller New 3DS – unless I dig out my Jnco’s, there’s no way I can accommodate an XL) and size makes a big difference. I’m interested to check out the Switch Lite but I don’t think there’s a lot of incentive for me to go that route. Not yet anyway.

Nintendo switch, 3ds, animal crossing, dragon quest
It’s a good little family.

This little system has a lot of life left. There are still so many games for the 3DS (and the DS for that matter) that I have yet to play. Let me know some of your favorite games!

 

It’s starting!

We’ve been aware of some very exciting titles coming to the Nintendo Switch late this year. Now that a relatively dry summer has passed, Nintendo fans are about to go broke in the coming months.

I’ve been itching to play Sword/Shield so much I’ve kind of had to tuck it away in the basement of my mind so I don’t lose my sanity.

Link’s Awakening, Dragon Quest XI, Little Town Hero, Untitled Goose Game… not to mention the addition of SNES titles to Nintendo Switch Online.

I’m kind of on overload right now. What games are going to eat your money up yum this winter?

My Handheld History

game boy pic
Batteries Included!!!

What was the first video game system you owned? For me it was the Game Boy. My parents got it for me for my 10th birthday. Friends and cousins had the NES, so I had played my fair share of Mario. Our house didn’t have a dedicated gaming system, though. We had anApple Macintosh that my dad bought because he knew computers were going to be important in the future and wanted my sister and me to be exposed to it early. Also, he probably thought it would be cool. And it was.

crystal quest
Crystal Quest

 

By far, my favorite game on that old Mac was Crystal Quest. With the mouse, you would pilot a little circle that was your ship, maneuvering around obstacles and blasting enemies while trying to collect all the crystals on each screen. Once you have all the crystals, a door would open allowing you to pass on to the next stage.

 

But the NES was the thing. And the SNES was out at that point too. Financially, a dedicated gaming console wasn’t in the cards. I don’t remember if I had asked for the Game Boy specifically but as soon as it arrived it was my life. It was like having an NES wherever I went. I didn’t give the monochromatic display a second thought. Even today, the fact that those games only had four shades of green seems wild to me. The things you could do with that little machine impress me to this day.

kirbys dream land boxThe excitement of getting a new game was palpable. I remember going to Toys R Us and getting Kirby’s Dream Land.You didn’t wait to get home to play a new game. You hopped in the back of your mom’s car, popped that fresh cartridge in, and started sucking up the bad guys. My mom and I played Super Mario Land and Tetris to no end. Especially Tetris. We would challenge each other, passing the Game Boy back and forth or leaving notes for each other with our new high scores. My sister got a Game Boy of her own not long after. It was settled. We were a Game Boy house.

As I got older and especially as I started making money of my own, I ended up getting an NES, a SNES, and almost every console Nintendo released over the years. The SNES in particular was home to some of my favorite games of all time such as Super Mario World, Super Mario RPG, and Earthbound. With the release of the Game Boy Advance, Nintendo made many of their classic NES titles available on the handheld. Super Nintendo and Nintendo 64 titles were ported to the Nintendo DS, successor to the GBA. My experience with those consoles was special and unique to their time, but once I could play them on the subway (or just in bed) I never wanted to go back.

botw link looks
That place looks safe.

Even with Nintendo’s newest console, the Switch, which is capable of being played as a standard home console on a tv, I most often defer to its portable mode. I probably played a few hours of Breath Of The Wild in dock-mode to get a real good look at the landscape of post-apocalypse Hyrule. Damn, that game is beautiful.But then I was back to playing the Switch as a handheld. I think I was programmed by the Game Boy. That was the way I learned to interface with games; as a personal, intimate experience, but one that I could share with a community of handheld gamers, be it through talking about games at school, swapping cartridges, or going head to head via link cable. I travel a lot now, and while I do have a home console or two with me, the majority of my gaming takes place on a clamshell I can fit in my pocket wherever I go.

That brings me to Handheld History. I love talking about my favorite games almost as much as I love playing them and that’s why people start blogs, right? Here you’ll find game reviews, (hopefully not too cringey) reminiscences, and a little history about portable consoles.

Thanks for stopping by. I’d love to know what your first console was – portable or not! Email handheldhistorygames@gmail.com or share your thoughts in the comments below.