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News Briefs - FUNi licenses, Best Buy, DSi, and more

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Nintendo's DS redesign: the DSi

So, I've been a little absent lately, mostly due to some personal stuff mixed with the phenomenal task of organizing and writing up the piles of stuff that I still have left over from Comic Con. (Note to self: don't take on so many articles that your coverage will only be complete a full month after the convention.) Since I haven't been up on my normal (i.e. non-Comic Con-related) news in the past few weeks, I've compiled all of the big articles that you might have missed into this post.

First off, FUNimation picked up a bunch of new licenses back in the middle of the month. Their new titles include Bamboo Blade, El Cazador De La Bruja, My Bride Is A Mermaid, Rin ~ Daughters of Mnemosyne, and three Gonzo shows: Blassreiter, the infamous Dragonaut, and the quite well-received Tower of Druaga. (Read Uncle Yo's reviews of Druaga and Mnemosyne for more info on the shows!) It's interesting that FUNi is continuing to license Gonzo shows left and right despite Gonzo essentially spitting in the face of American distributors by pushing out Druaga and Blassreiter directly through CrunchyRoll. Apparently FUNi thinks that Gonzo giving free promotion for a show is at least a little better than Johnny McFansubber doing it.

Speaking of CrunchyRoll, the website announced a couple of days ago that in celebration of "Global Shinkai Day," they will be streaming three of director Makoto Shinkai's works (5 Centimeters Per Second, Voices of a Distant Star, and The Place Promised In Our Early Days) on Saturday, February 28 for 24 hours only. I've yet to experience Shinkai's critically-acclaimed anime, so I'll definitely be taking advantage of that limited time offer come Saturday to watch 5 Centimeters Per Second, a movie that is unfortunately stuck in limbo, as no North American anime distributor has officially picked it up yet.

Best Buy logo

Best Buy is cutting down on their in-store anime selection due to the economic situation, but it's not all bad news for anime fans. Select stores will be holding 50% off sales, which will make that Haruhi boxset that you haven't bought yet seem so. much. jucier. ANN has a preliminary list of participating stores, but it's still subject to change.

For those of you who watched the Oscars, you might have noticed that when La Maison En Petits Cubes won the award for Best Animated Short Film, it was not a French animator who stood up to take the award. That's because despite it's extremely French name, Cubes is actually an anime, created by Japanese director and writer Kunio Kato. This marks the second Oscar win for an anime, and the first in the Animated Short Film Category. (Studio Ghibli's Spirited Away won for Best Animated Picture in 2003.)

Finally, on the video game front, Nintendo has announced a release date for the DSi, the third redesign of the bestselling DS platform. The system will launch in the United States on April 5, 2009 in two colors (blue and black) and for an MSRP of $169.99. It will sell millions and will top the NPD charts for months on end, despite the fact that it provides no significant gameplay upgrades to the DS Lite. Such is life in this Nintendo-world of ours...

Nintendo announces DS revision (totally not an iPod Touch)

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Nintendo DSi

Now that most of you have probably manned up and bought your sleek little DS Lites, Nintendo wants to sweeten the deal (and fill their wallet) with the newest DS revision: The DSi will feature TWO cameras, one on the back of the top screen at VGA resolution and another next to the microphone, more along the lines of 0.3megapixels. The screens will now be slightly larger at 3.25 inches, and the device will be 12% thinner.

The new software capabilities will include SD cards compatibility (through a new SD card slot) and music playback. The DSi also comes with a currently-unannounced amount of internal storage. The most controversial change is the removal of the Gameboy Advance slot altogether.

Not only that, but Nintendo's rolling out new infrastructure as well. The DSi will have a web browser and the ability to send photos to the Wii Photo Channel. It will be able to connect online and download games directly over Wi-Fi from the "DSi Shop." Sound like another popular piece of electronics? Perhaps that's because Nintendo's Apple-inspired marketing and design team are just itching for some of that iWhatever action.

While Nintendo claims that this revision is a "third platform," we all know what they said about the DS when it came out and squashed the GBA. DS Phat and Lite owners reluctant to switch over should watch Nintendo warily so they don't get caught unawares by a surprise generational shift for the platform.

Finally, a Joystiq post confirms that according to Nintendo of America President Reggie Fils-Aime, the DSi will not be coming to the United States until "well into calendar year 2009." Too bad!

[via Joystiq]