Nintendo Wii U Launches November 18 In America

During ‘s U event this morning in New York, Nintendo finally announced some launch details.

The system releases on November 18th with two price points: a basic set (in white) $299.99 and deluxe set (in black) for $349.99.

In comparison, the deluxe set will have the black color, more memory, a console stand, GamePad cradle, and Nintendo Land bundled in. The basic set will merely have AC adapters, HDMI cables, and a sensor bar.

Both SKUs will come only with a GamePad; Wii remotes will be compatible with the new system and, therefore, won’t launch with the system. For those that aren’t part of the 100 million people with a Wii-mote, they will be sold separately.

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4 comments

  1. It happens pretty randomly. I’ll be freezing then later I’ll be sweating even though the room temperature didn’t change. No I’m not experiencing menopause or anything haha I’m fifteen. I might have thyroid problems, but I don’t know if that has anything to do with hot and cold flashes. I have bad circulation so that contributes to the cold but what about the hot? Sometimes My hands and feet randomly get hot and red and it’s really uncomfortable. What’s up?

  2. I am planning on serving 200+ people hot chocolate and want to come up with the easiest and most inexpensive way to prepare the hot chocolate. I have 2 large perc. coffee pots – has any one tried filling a percalor with hot water & mixing containers of dry hot chocolate mix? What about Nestle hot chocolate syrup. Thanks in advance for any ideas!

  3. I have a forced-hot-water heating system with three zones, first floor, second floor, and water tank. After some maintenance on the system the second floor is constantly heating, even though the thermostat is off. I checked the voltage on the circulator pump and it is zero, so the pump is not running. It sounds like it is acting like a gravity-fed system. There are manual valves on the system, but the only things in the loops that are controlled by the thermostats are the circulator pumps. Do the pumps act as valves when they are not pumping? That was my guess so I replaced the pump, but my registers are still hot. If the pump does NOT act as a valve, what is supposed to prevent the hot water from moving through the system when the pumps are not running? I need some HVAC basics here. Thanks!