Two New
Nintendo DS
Games Let
Players
Explore
Their Inner
Pokémon
Randomized
Dungeons,
Online
Features
Fuel Latest
Mystery
Dungeon
Adventures
REDMOND,
Wash., Feb.
26, 2008 –
Ever
wondered
what it
would be
like to
become a
Pokémon?
With the
April 20
launch of
Pokémon®
Mystery
Dungeon:
Explorers of
Time and
Pokémon®
Mystery
Dungeon:
Explorers of
Darkness for
Nintendo
DS™,
hand-held
gamers will
soon find
out.
In this pair
of
action-packed
adventures,
players
journey as
actual
Pokémon
through a
fantastic
land
untouched by
humans.
Before the
game starts,
players take
a test to
help them
figure out
which of 16
Pokémon best
represents
their
personalities.
Players then
experience
their
adventure
through the
eyes of a
Pokémon as
they explore
the land and
embark on an
epic journey
through time
and
darkness.
They talk
and team up
with other
Pokémon to
set out on
an epic
voyage while
navigating
an endless
array of
randomly
generated
dungeons.
More than
490 Pokémon
populate
these new
games,
guaranteeing
strategic,
intense
battles and
infinite
possibilities,
no matter
which
Pokémon
players
become. To
widen their
circle of
Pokémon
friends,
Nintendo®
Wi-Fi
Connection
lets users
engage in
wireless
rescue
operations
and send
alerts to
their
friends via
e-mail or
mobile text
message.
"Only the
Pokémon
Mystery
Dungeon
series lets
players
experience
the thrill
of actually
becoming a
Pokémon
character,"
said Cammie
Dunaway,
Nintendo of
America's
executive
vice
president of
Sales &
Marketing.
"It's a
unique
perspective
that
delights
both
longtime
Pokémon fans
and
newcomers
alike."
Fans of the
two previous
Pokémon
Mystery
Dungeon
games, Red
Rescue Team
and Blue
Rescue Team,
will marvel
at the
greatly
enhanced
graphics,
new story
and grand
adventure in
Pokémon
Mystery
Dungeon:
Explorers of
Time and
Pokémon
Mystery
Dungeon:
Explorers of
Darkness.
For Game
Boy® Advance
owners, the
fresh look
and wireless
aspects of
these new
Pokémon
titles
provide even
more reasons
to upgrade
to Nintendo
DS. And best
of all for
budget-conscious
parents,
Nintendo DS
is also able
to play the
entire
library of
Game Boy
Advance
games.
For more
information
about these
two new
Pokémon
games, visit
Nintendo.com.
About
Nintendo:
The
worldwide
innovator in
the creation
of
interactive
entertainment,
Nintendo
Co., Ltd.,
of Kyoto,
Japan,
manufactures
and markets
hardware and
software for
its Wii™,
Nintendo
DS™, Game
Boy® Advance
and Nintendo
GameCube™
systems.
Since 1983,
Nintendo has
sold nearly
2.5 billion
video games
and more
than 430
million
hardware
units
globally,
and has
created
industry
icons like
Mario™,
Donkey
Kong®,
Metroid®,
Zelda™ and
Pokémon®. A
wholly owned
subsidiary,
Nintendo of
America
Inc., based
in Redmond,
Wash.,
serves as
headquarters
for
Nintendo's
operations
in the
Western
Hemisphere.
For more
information
about
Nintendo,
visit the
company's
Web site at
www.nintendo.com.
About
Pokémon USA:
Pokémon USA,
Inc., a
subsidiary
of The
Pokémon
Company in
Japan,
manages the
property
outside of
Asia, which
includes
licensing,
marketing,
the Pokémon
Trading Card
Game, an
animated TV
series, the
Pokémon
Trading
Figure Game,
home
entertainment
and the
official
Pokémon Web
site.
Pokémon was
launched in
Japan in
1996 for
play on
Nintendo's
Game Boy®
and has
since
evolved into
a global
cultural
phenomenon.
Pokémon was
introduced
in North
America in
1998 and
today is one
of the most
popular toy
and
entertainment
properties
in the
world. For
more
information,
visit
www.pokemon.com.