DID YOU KNOW? REMARKABLE WII AND NINTENDO DS CONTROLS EARN NINTENDO A SECOND EMMY AWARD

Jan. 8, 2008 - For the second year in a row, the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences has honored Nintendo with an Emmy® Award for excellence in engineering creativity. The groundbreaking Wii™ system was recognized for its innovative motion-sensing controls, which have attracted a broad range of nontraditional gamers and veteran players alike. The award also recognized Nintendo DS™ for its pioneering touch-screen control scheme and distinctive dual-screen display, both of which helped to make it the nation's top-selling game system of 2007.

Don James, holds three awards from the 59th Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards
Nintendo of America Executive Vice President of Operations, Don James, holds three awards from the 59th Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards held on January 7, 2008, at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. The Nintendo DS received an award for Handheld Game Device Display Screen Innovation, while both the Wii and Nintendo DS were given honors for Game Controller Innovation.
(c)2008 Nintendo

Presented in Las Vegas at the annual Technological & Engineering Emmy Awards on Jan. 7, these latest honors set the stage for even more exciting control innovations from Nintendo in 2008. A forthcoming Mario Kart™ racing game for Wii will be packaged with a wireless Wii Wheel™, while the hotly anticipated Wii Fit™ will keep players more active than ever with the extraordinary Wii Balance Board.

"The pioneering interfaces for Wii and Nintendo DS reflect our long tradition of seeking new ways to enhance the gaming experience for users at every level," said Don James, Nintendo of America's executive vice president of operations. "We're grateful for this award and thank the academy for honoring us a second time."

Nintendo previously received an Emmy in 2007 for its invention of the plus-shaped D-pad, which radically changed how people interact with their video games and, by extension, their televisions. For more information about Nintendo, please visit www.Nintendo.com.

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