Tsukuru
09-06-2004, 10:19 PM
V.Smile is not a simple gaming console!
..It is an aspirational console, a unique educational platform that opens up an immense number of opportunities. Parents can leave their children to play unsupervised and trust for the first time that they will only be able to access intelligent and completely safe content.
Plug V.Smile into your TV, play with the easy to use controller and watch the screen come to life with engaging activities, enriched graphics, fantastic sound effects and cool music. V.Smile Games feature an incredible variety of learning topics that have been carefully and evenly distributed throughout the different titles. Games are therefore well targeted and tailored around children’s ages and abilities.http://www.tools2learn.co.uk/product.asp?id=2503
I was watching TV just a few minutes ago and saw a commercial for this gaming console. It's an interesting idea; appease parental concerns over video games by making them educational not violent. Whether it will succeed depends on their marketing abilities.
I remember the likes of Mario is Missing and Mario's Time Machine for the SNES. Though the style was unconventional, I actually found those entertaining as a young 'un. I don't think Nintendo made a relatively good profit compared to their usual games.
Your thoughts on V.Smile? Would you hand your child one of these consoles, or do you think they'd already be Nintendo fankids by age 5? (Nothing wrong with that, proud owner of a gamecube here).
..It is an aspirational console, a unique educational platform that opens up an immense number of opportunities. Parents can leave their children to play unsupervised and trust for the first time that they will only be able to access intelligent and completely safe content.
Plug V.Smile into your TV, play with the easy to use controller and watch the screen come to life with engaging activities, enriched graphics, fantastic sound effects and cool music. V.Smile Games feature an incredible variety of learning topics that have been carefully and evenly distributed throughout the different titles. Games are therefore well targeted and tailored around children’s ages and abilities.http://www.tools2learn.co.uk/product.asp?id=2503
I was watching TV just a few minutes ago and saw a commercial for this gaming console. It's an interesting idea; appease parental concerns over video games by making them educational not violent. Whether it will succeed depends on their marketing abilities.
I remember the likes of Mario is Missing and Mario's Time Machine for the SNES. Though the style was unconventional, I actually found those entertaining as a young 'un. I don't think Nintendo made a relatively good profit compared to their usual games.
Your thoughts on V.Smile? Would you hand your child one of these consoles, or do you think they'd already be Nintendo fankids by age 5? (Nothing wrong with that, proud owner of a gamecube here).