Wii Family Edition

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Jump to navigationJump to search
233Porygon2.png This page is a candidate for deletion because there's nothing this Wii can do the original can't.

Someone has decided that this article should not be included as part of Bulbapedia. If you agree with this decision, state your reasoning on this article's talk page. If you disagree with deletion, make your voice heard.

When a consensus has been reached, this notice can be removed by an administrator.

Administrators - Remember to check if anything links here and the page history before deleting.

This page was last edited on August 27, 2024 at 9:48 PM.

Wii Family Edition
Wii Family Edition.png
The White Wii Family Edition
Release dates
Japan: N/A
North America: October 23, 2011
Europe: November 4, 2011
Australia: November 11, 2011
South Korea: N/A
China: N/A
Hong Kong: N/A
Taiwan: December 16, 2011
Technical specs
  • Compatibility with 12cm Wii Game Discs
  • 729 MHz "Broadway" IBM CPU
  • 243 MHz "Hollywood" ATI GPU
  • 88 MB total memory
  • Full list below
Related information
Console generation: Seventh generation
Pokémon generations: I*, IV, V*
Console type: Home
Colors:
White
Blue
Black
Red*
Pink*
External links

The Wii Family Edition is a revision for the Wii. It was released in North America on October 23, 2011, in Europe on November 4, 2011, and in Australia on November 11, 2011. It was not released in Japan, however, but a black NTSC-J variant of Wii Family Edition which can be used to play Japanese Wii discs was released in Taiwan on December 16, 2011.[1]

It was discontinued worldwide on October 20, 2013.[2][3][4]

Comparison to the original Wii

  • The Wii Family Edition is incompatible with Nintendo GameCube games or hardware like the original model was. Due to lack of GameCube controller ports, this model is also incompatible with Wii peripherals, which need to be connected through the ports, and Wii games which require such peripherals to play.
  • This model is designed to sit horizontally, rather than upright like the original model. The stand included with the original model can be used on this Wii, however.


Technical specs

  • Compatibility with 12cm Wii Game Discs
  • 729 MHz "Broadway" IBM CPU
  • 243 MHz "Hollywood" ATI GPU
  • 88 MB total memory, 24 MB Mo-Sys 1T-SRAM, 324 MHz, 2,7 GB/s bandwidth
  • 512 MB internal flash memory, for game, channel, and data saving
  • SD memory card bay for expansion of save space.
  • Two USB ports for expansion and/or networking capabilities

Pokémon games

On game discs

Most Wii games are released on the Wii's own 12cm discs. There are four known games that feature Pokémon.

Title Genre Release
Pokémon Battle Revolution Battle simulation 2006
Super Smash Bros. Brawl Versus fighting 2008
PokéPark Wii: Pikachu's Adventure Action-adventure 2009
PokéPark 2: Wonders Beyond Action-adventure 2012


WiiWare games

WiiWare

WiiWare games are special games downloadable via the Wii Shop Channel. Two Pokémon games have been released worldwide, and a third has been released only in Japan.

Title Genre Release Cost
My Pokémon Ranch Virtual life 2008 1000 Wii Points
Pokémon Rumble Action RPG 2009 1500 Wii Points
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon (WiiWare) Dungeon crawler 2009 1200 Wii Points


Virtual Console games

Virtual Console games are old games that were originally released on past consoles, and had now been re-released on the Wii Shop Channel. Like WiiWare games, they could be downloaded after being bought. There are two Pokémon games that were released, plus the original Super Smash Bros. game.

Title Genre Original system Original release VC release
Pokémon Snap First-person rail shooter Nintendo 64 1997 2007
Pokémon Puzzle League Puzzle Nintendo 64 2000 2008
Super Smash Bros. Versus fighting Nintendo 64 1999 2009


External links

References

Game systems with Pokémon games
Nintendo handheld consoles
GB (Pocket · GBL · SGB · SGB2) • GBCminiGBA (SP · GBm · GBP)
DS (Lite · DSi · DSi XL) • 3DS (XL · 2DS · New 3DS · New 3DS XL · New 2DS XL)
Switch (Lite · OLED)
Nintendo home consoles
SNES (BS-X · SGB · NP · SGB2) • N64 (DD) • GCN (GBP)
Wii (Family Edition · mini) • Wii U
Switch (OLED)
Sega consoles
PicoCoCoPadBeena