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Official Wii Speak Microphone

Official Wii Speak Microphone

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From: Nintendo
Category: Video Games

List Price: $29.99
Buy New: $24.95
You Save: $5.04 (17%)



New (30) Used (2)

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 175

Platform: Nintendo Wii
Media: Accessory
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Operating System: Nintendo Wii
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3
Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.7 x 1.3

MPN: WII-RVLAMU
Model: RVL A MU
UPC: 045496890261
EAN: 0045496890261
ASIN: B001EZ8IBS

Release Date: November 16, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Fast shipping.

Features:
  • The microphone sits atop the sensor bar and picks up the conversation of everyone in the room to encourage a more inclusive experience
  • Compatible with Animal Crossing - City Folk
  • Requires an on-line connection

Accessories:

  • Animal Crossing: City Folk

Similar Items:

  • Animal Crossing: City Folk
  • Animal Crossing: City Folk: Prima Official Game Guide (Prima Official Game Guides)
  • Wii Music
  • Active Life Outdoor Challenge
  • MySims Kingdom

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
With the new Wii Speak Accessory, it's like you're all in the same room. The microphone sits atop the sensor bar and picks up the conversation of everyone in the room to encourage a more inclusive experience. This is compatible with Animal Crossing: City Folk. The Wii Speak accessory requires an on-line connection.




Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Works like a charm   December 9, 2008
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

We bought 4 of them to talk with family around the US. Works like a charm with the Wii Speak Channel. We have been able to talk in a conference call situation between all with great clarity for hours with little or no breakups during the chat. Highly recommended if family and friends have Wii's.


5 out of 5 stars excellent choice for talking with nintendo   November 24, 2008
 5 out of 8 found this review helpful

We bought this for Animal Crossing city folk, and use it a lot with different people online and it works great. The thing that i like about it best is also the reason a lot people dont like it and thats the fact that its conference call style. So if you say something in the room with the wii everyone who is playing with you then can hear it. Which i like for two reasons. One when we play xbox and one person has the headset on the other two just kinda feel excluded cause you cant hear the online or join in (i dont know if you cant get more headsets cause i dont often play xbox but thats how i felt the few times i did play) and two is there are so many young children with a nintendo wii that it makes it easy for parents to monitor online play and keep the creeps out. the fact that you need to code it came with to get the channel kind of sucks, but people should keep in mind technically the channel doesnt come out til mid december so the code could just be so you can download early before its realised all the way. Overall i like this product and look forward to getting to use it with other games for my wii


5 out of 5 stars Love it!!!!   November 22, 2008
 3 out of 6 found this review helpful

I can't imagine how I would communicate in Animal Crossing without this since typing in the game is so hard without a keyboard which I don't have yet but this way you get to talk to everyone in the town. I went into a town with three people I didn't know and we talked to each other like we were in the same room and became fast friends. I love it, love it!!!


5 out of 5 stars yes wii do speak   November 19, 2008
 3 out of 71 found this review helpful

im speaking loaud and clear to all my friends so they can hear the enjoyment that comes to my ear the smoothness the groovyness of this idea its vented for your slotted needs and it feeds you the idea of life

no to get out of the poetry the wii speak is a product that complets the wii for me
i have been going from bad product to bad product with the wii from m&m racing to alien syndrom it jst isnt right whats that i see and god like light its the wii speak its my shining star like a mario star if you will wii speak is a revolutionary product and will become the most useful thing ever eventually i should say the wii speak is lacking alot i with it came in a headset form becuase this thing sits atop your sensor bar and is no bigger then the sensor bar i was really hoping this product would be able to be used on cod5 but it isnt whic makes me mad but hey wat ever another good game would be animal crossingwhich is really good for the wii speak i can not think of that many con maybe one when you have alot of people over and you are all talking at the same time it gets very loud and annoying and the words get slured and you cant understand crap and another con would be that you have to but this produce new or it wont work becuase if you buy it used it wont come with the code and you need that code so it sucks but it is all good just pay 30 dollars thats my reveiw let the legned of zelda live on



4 out of 5 stars ii Speak   November 25, 2008
 18 out of 18 found this review helpful

I love the wii speak microphone. You can hear everyone in the room clearly. The quality is great. And it's nice that you don't need a headset, which can become uncomfortable and you can only hear one person talking. Talking is much easier to communicate with someone. Typing with the wiimote becomes tedious and is less fun then actually speaking to someone. If you get a keyboard to help speed up your typing, which runs for about $40 or $50 compared to $30 for the mic or $20 if you buy the bundle with Animal Crossing, It's still not as efficient and fun as the microphone. Having a keyboard is just another "controller" you have to worry about. You can't play and talk at the same time like you can with the mic.

If you are going to get animal crossing anyways, I highly recommend the mic. If you have no interest in the game, I would wait to see what the wii speak channel is like, since it's not even up yet. So buying it without animal crossings is useless at this point. And also if you aren't going to buy AC then I would wait to see what other games are compatible with it. Hopefully Nintendo will fully embrace the mic. It will add a lot more playing value to games if it does.


The Nintendo Wii goes on sale on Sunday, November 19. Thanks to the inclusion of the simple--but infectiously fun--Wii Sports game, the Wii is the first console in recent memory that lets you have fun straight out of the box. Still, there are a few key Wii accessories you'll want to pick up to maximize your Wii experience--especially if you're buying it as a gift.

Extra controllers: Like all recent consoles, the Wii ships with just a single controller (well, one two-part controller: one Wiimote, plus one nunchuk). But the real fun of the system is playing the head-to-head Wii Sports games such as tennis and boxing. To do so, you'll need at least one extra set of controllers--and again, that's one Wiimote ($28.99) plus one nunchuk ($12.99). The Wii supports as many as four, but just the one extra controller set should suffice--at least for Christmas morning.

Rechargeable batteries: The Wiimote takes two standard AA batteries. They're included--with the Wii, and with the sold-separately version of the controller mentioned above--but avid players may find the juice draining pretty quickly, especially if they keep the nunchuk attached (it draws its power from the Wiimote). Instead of buying an endless stream of costly AAs, consider investing in a set of rechargeables. You can score a charger and four rechargeable nickel-metal-hydride batteries for less than $25.

GameCube controllers: The Wii is fully backwards compatible with the Nintendo GameCube, but there's a catch: to play the GameCube games, you'll need a GameCube controller ($15.99). You can even go wireless with the Nintendo WaveBird ($59.99). If you already have a GameCube, your existing controllers will work just fine--just plug them in to one of the four ports underneath the flip-up panel on the Wii's topside. GameCube controllers should also work with the Wii's "Virtual Console" games--which saves you the trouble of having to buy a Classic Controller.

GameCube memory cards: One other annoyance when playing GameCube games: your progress can only be saved to GameCube memory cards, not to the Wii's internal memory or to an SD card (we're hoping Nintendo fixes this with a future firmware update). Like the controllers, your old GC cards will work just fine--there are two slots right next to the GameCube controller ports. If you don't have any onhand (and you want to save your games on GC titles), you'll need to spring for a $26.90 (2GB) memory card.

Wii Points: One of the big attactions of the Wii is its Virtual Console, which lets you purchase classic games that originally came from the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), the Super NES, the Nintendo 64, the Sega Genesis, and the TurboGrafx16. By the end of 2006, at least 30 titles should be available, including Donkey Kong (NES), Super Mario 64 (N64), and Sonic the Hedgehog (Genesis). To purchase the downloadable titles, you'll need to use a Nintendo currency known as Wii Points (similar to the Microsoft Points on Xbox Live), which currently have an exchange rate of 100 points per U.S. dollar. You can buy Wii Points directly through the console's online store, or use prepaid cards (2000 Wii Points) available in various denominations.

SD card: If you're close to filling the Wii's built-in 512MB of storage with your Virtual Console games, you can always expand your available space with an SD card. Nintendo sells its own, but any run-of-the-mill card will do. Fairly spacious 1GB cards are available for less than $20--even less with mail-in rebates--and they'll work in plenty of other gadgets as well.

Wireless access point: In addition to the downloadable Virtual Console games, the Wii offers online "channels," including news, weather, and even an Opera Web browser (head-to-head online gaming is said to be coming sometime in 2007). You can get online for free via the Wii's built-in Wi-Fi. To do so, of course, you'll need a nearby wireless access point or router. Alternately, you can plug the Nintendo Wi-Fi USB Connector into any nearby PC on a wired network, and the Wii--plus your Nintendo DS--will be able to use it to get online instead.

Component video adapter: The Wii doesn't have the graphical horsepower to handle high-def graphics, but it can do DVD-level 480p video, which will look considerably better on large HDTVs. To see the Wii's games in 480p, you'll need Nintendo's proprietary component video adapter, which should run about $20.

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