For those worried that the Wii U doesnât work on outside, say on Japanese high speed rail, take heart. Apparently, it does. And hereâs the photo proof.
Kuzo from Japanese site Rocket News recently boarded the Nozomi bullet trainâthe N700 series Nozomi, to be exact, which is outfitted with electric sockets and WiFi. Besides being a stunt, the testâs goal was to see the breadth of the Wii Uâs play space.
According to Kuzo, lugging the Wii U around wasnât as bad as he thought it would be, especially compared to, say, carrying the PS3 in some sort of portable contraption.
Will this become a new trend, people carrying around their Wii Us in public so they can play New Super Mario Bros. Wii U? Probably not. But if you have three hours to kill on the bullet train and you donât might the extra load, bringing your Wii U seems entirely feasible.
In case you missed them, hereâs Kotakuâs New Super Mario Bros. Wii U review and the Wii U review.
https://lastchance.cc/new-super-mario-bros-u-the-kotaku-review-5960880%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Wii UăŻć€ćșæăéăčăïŒ æ°ćččç·ă«äčăăȘăăWii Uă§éăă§ăżă [ăă±ăăăă„ăŒăč]
(Top photo: ăă±ăăăă„ăŒăč)
Kotaku East is your slice of Asian internet culture, bringing you the latest talking points from Japan, Korea, China and beyond. Tune in every morning from 4am to 8am.