Difference between revisions of "N-Gage"

From Sega Retro

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*''[[Pocket Kingdom: Own the World]]'' (2004)
 
*''[[Pocket Kingdom: Own the World]]'' (2004)
 
*''[[Puyo Pop (N-Gage)|Puyo Pop]]'' (2003)
 
*''[[Puyo Pop (N-Gage)|Puyo Pop]]'' (2003)
*''[[Sega Rally Championship]]'' (2004)
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*''[[Sega Rally Championship (N-Gage)|Sega Rally Championship]]'' (2004)
 
*''[[SonicN]]'' (2003)
 
*''[[SonicN]]'' (2003)
 
*''[[Super Monkey Ball Jr.|Super Monkey Ball]]'' (2003)
 
*''[[Super Monkey Ball Jr.|Super Monkey Ball]]'' (2003)
 
*''[[Virtua Cop]]'' (Cancelled)
 
*''[[Virtua Cop]]'' (Cancelled)
*''[[Virtua Tennis]]'' (2004)
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*''[[Virtua Tennis (N-Gage)|Virtua Tennis]]'' (2004)
  
 
[[Category:Non-Sega consoles]]
 
[[Category:Non-Sega consoles]]

Revision as of 10:10, 26 November 2016

NGage.png
N-Gage
Manufacturer: Nokia

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The Nokia N-Gage was Nokia's short-lived attempt at penetrating the handheld video games market. It combined a smartphone with a handheld video game console that accepted "cartridges", which in this case are actually games stored on commodity MultiMediaCards. Two models were made; both failed. Sega provided some third-party support during the platform's life.

Sega Games on the N-Gage