Difference between revisions of "N-Gage"

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{{ConsoleBob
 
{{ConsoleBob
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| name=
 
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| maker=[[wikipedia:Nokia|Nokia]]
 
| maker=[[wikipedia:Nokia|Nokia]]
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| variants=N-Gage QD
 
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| ngage_date_us=2003-10-06{{ref|1=https://web.archive.org/web/20081210124611/http://www.nokia.com/A4136002?newsid=919619}}{{intref|Press Release: 2003-08-18: Nokia Portugal escolhe Ecofilmes para distribuição dos jogos N-Gage}}
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| ngage_rrp_us=299{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20071012194600/http://gamepro.com/gamepro/domestic/games/features/125748.shtml}}
 
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{{sub-stub}}The '''Nokia N-Gage''' was [[wikipedia:Nokia|Nokia]]'s short-lived attempt at penetrating the handheld video games market. It combined a phone with a handheld video game console that accepted cartridges. Two models were made; both failed. [[Sega]] provided some third-party support during the platform's life.
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{{sub-stub}}
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The '''Nokia N-Gage''' was [[wikipedia:Nokia|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 [[wikipedia:MultiMediaCard|MultiMediaCard]]s. Two models were made; both failed. [[Sega]] provided some third-party support during the platform's life.
  
==Sega Games on the N-Gage==
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==Sega games on the N-Gage==
*''[[Alien Front]]'' (Cancelled)
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*''[[Alien Front (N-Gage)|Alien Front]]'' (unreleased)
 
*''[[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)
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*''[[Super Monkey Ball (N-Gage)|Super Monkey Ball]]'' (2003)
 
*''[[Virtua Cop]]'' (Cancelled)
 
*''[[Virtua Cop]]'' (Cancelled)
*''[[Virtua Tennis]]'' (2004)
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*''[[Virtua Tennis (N-Gage)|Virtua Tennis]]'' (2003)
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==Other N-Gage games also released for Sega systems==
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{{NonSegaList|NGAGE}}
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==References==
 +
<references/>
  
[[Category:Post-Sega Consoles]]
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{{NonSegaConsoles}}

Latest revision as of 02:17, 18 August 2022

NGage logo.svg
NGage.png
N-Gage
Manufacturer: Nokia
Variants: N-Gage QD
Release Date RRP Code
N-Gage
US
2003-10-06[1][2] $299[3] ?

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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

Other N-Gage games also released for Sega systems

References


Non-Sega consoles
Nintendo
Nintendo Entertainment System (1983) | Game Boy (1989) | Super Nintendo Entertainment System (1990) | Nintendo 64 (1996) | Game Boy Color (1998) | Game Boy Advance (2001) | Nintendo GameCube (2001) | Nintendo DS (2004) | Wii (2006) | Nintendo 3DS (2011) | Wii U (2012) | Nintendo Switch (2017)
Sony
PlayStation (1994) | PlayStation 2 (2000) | PlayStation Portable (2004) | PlayStation 3 (2006) | PlayStation Vita (2011) | PlayStation 4 (2013) | PlayStation 5 (2020)
Microsoft
Xbox (2001) | Xbox 360 (2005) | Xbox One (2013) | Xbox Series X (2020)
Mobile
iOS | Android | Windows Phone
Other
Atari 2600 (1977) | ColecoVision (1982) | PC Engine (1987) | R-Zone (1995) | Game.com (1997) | WonderSwan (1998) | Neo Geo Pocket Color (1999) | N-Gage (2003) | LeapFrog Didj (2008) | Stadia (2019)