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Sonic Wiki Zone
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This article is about a subject in the real world.
Information in this article is about real-life people, companies, and objects, which do not relate to the in-universe Sonic series.

The Nintendo 3DS is a handheld game system released by Nintendo. The 3DS is the successor to the Nintendo DS and is notable for fully integrating stereoscopic 3D graphics.

To do this, the system uses a technique known as autostereoscopy, which involves rendering two separate images, one for each eye. This allows the top screen to present a sense of depth but the 3D is adjustable. Note that the bottom screen is not a 3D screen, and is instead a touchscreen interface similar to that found on the preceding Nintendo DS.

The 3DS is also backward-compatible with the entire backlog of DS games. All Sonic the Hedgehog games released on the DS can also be played on the 3DS. The cards for the 3DS have a bump on the right side in order to avoid them being inserted into a regular DS system.

With the release of Sonic Boom: Shattered Crystal in November 2014, a puzzle of Sonic Boom was added to the puzzle Swap game found in the Street Pass Mii Plaza which is preinstalled.

List of Sonic games on the Nintendo 3DS

Game Name
SG 630992 210762 front Sonic Generations
MarioSonic3DS Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games
File:Sonic3dstransformed.PNG Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed
Transformed3DSBonusEdition Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed: Bonus Edition
SonicLostWorld3DSBox Sonic Lost World
File:SSBf3DS Box Art.png Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS
SB Shattered Crystal NA Box Art Sonic Boom: Shattered Crystal
Sega-3d-classics-collection-656x584 Sega 3D Classics Collection
Mario&Sonic20163DS-NTSCbox Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games
SBF&I5009540 Sonic Boom: Fire & Ice

Virtual Console

The 3DS allows players to download old games onto their system via the eShop's Virtual Console service, similar to the corresponding service on the Wii U. Like the console version, the 3DS version includes games from non-Nintendo systems. Several Game Gear games are available internationally.

Game Gear games on the Virtual Console come with more features than other Virtual Console games. In addition to Restore Points (save states), users can select whether the display fits the screen as a square, stretches to fill the screen, or is surrounded by a detailed, 3D Game Gear border. The latter comes in three colors: red, blue, or black. Screen blurring is an option that emulates the original screen if chosen. Even game performance can be altered between "original" and "special" (original accurately emulates slowdown and special fixes the slowdown issues of the original games).

In addition, there is also a library of Sega 3D Classics on the eShop. These games are emulations of arcade games, Sega Genesis games, and Sega Master System games. These games support 3D, have save states, can add screen blurring and the games with multiplayer have local multiplayer via wireless.

List of Sonic Games on Virtual Console

List of Sonic Games in the 3D Classics

3DS Themes

In 2014 Nintendo updated the 3DS to included different themes for the 3DS home screen and a shop to by some of these themes are Sonic based.

List of 3DS Themes

Revisions

File:2ds.jpg

A Black and Red 2DS model.

Nintendo 2DS

On 12 October 2013 in North America and in the PAL Regions, the Nintendo 2DS was released. The 2DS is a budget model that is fully compatible with all 3DS and DS games but does not include the ability to display games in 3D. It still features all the functionality of 3DS and can be put to sleep using a slider that replicates closing the clamshell on a standard 3DS. WiFi can still be turned off, though it’s done via controls in the software rather than with a physical switch. In addition, the system only features a single mono speaker, unlike the dual stereo speakers on other models. When it was released a red model and a blue model were sold at US$129.99 alongside the 3DS and 3DS XL.[5]

New Nintendo 3DS (XL)

In late 2014/early 2015, the 3DS received a hardware upgrade in the form of the "New Nintendo 3DS", an iterative update comparable to the Nintendo DSi. Improvements on the original model include slightly larger screens, faster quad-core CPU, doubled RAM, and extra buttons to match the Circle Pad Pro accessory (a second analog nub and ZL/ZR buttons). Other new features include built-in amiibo support on the touch screen and an eye-tracking 3D feature that allows the console to adjust stereoscopic output based on the user's position. Several games can only be played on the New 3DS due to its upgraded hardware, although this does not include any Sonic games.

Like the original console, the New 3DS is produced in regular and XL variants. The regular model features interchangeable face plates similar to the Game Boy Micro, and received a limited release in NTSC regions.

Trivia

  • The 3DS is the first portable console to receive a 3D Sonic game, in Sonic Lost World. The game also marks the handheld debut of the ability to play as Super Sonic in levels, and the first predominantly-underwater 3D levels in the series.

References

  1. Nintendo (29 September 2010). Nintendo 3DS (Japanese). Nintendo Co., Ltd.. Retrieved on 13 June 2018.
  2. Zullo, Francesco (20 January 2011). Nintendo 3DS: uscita e prezzo ufficiale (Italian). GamesFanpage.it. Retrieved on 13 June 2018.
  3. Пробуем Nintendo 3DS. Канобу (24 March 2011). Retrieved on 13 June 2018.
  4. Robertson, Andy (18 September 2012). The (Nearly) Definitive Nintendo Battery Test. Wired. Retrieved on 04 April 2018.
  5. Goldfarb, Andrew (28 August 2013). Nintendo announces Nintendo 2DS. IGN. Retrieved on 28 August 2013.

Template:Video game systems

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