The Wii U is Nintendo's capitulation to the screen, the tyrant of the
digital age. As the follow-up to the original Wii - the nearly
100-million-selling, get-off-your-couch console that upended the video
game industry six years ago - the Wii U does not deliver the sensation
that its predecessor unleashed, the sense that something new had been
wrought upon this earth. It was not always routine for grandparents and
grandchildren to gather in front of the television to wield plastic
sticks and pretend to bowl.Instead, the Wii U feels like an accommodation to the new mode of living that Apple's iPhone and iPad have introduced. That lifestyle was evoked by a New Yorker cover this summer that featured family members posing for a beach vacation snapshot while engrossed in their personal devices.
The Wii U, which is to be released on Sunday, works with the motion-control remotes you probably already own from the original Wii, and it plays most of the original games. What's new - beyond high-definition graphics and some Internet-enabled features that won't be turned on until Sunday - is the Wii U GamePad, a roughly 10-by-5-inch touch-screen controller. With a six-inch display surrounded by thumbsticks, buttons and triggers, the GamePad is the offspring of an iPad Mini and a traditional video game controller.
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