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Nintendogs, first called Puppy Times, was originally designed to have fifteen different versions, one for each breed of dog. Satoru Iwata suggested this to convey the feel that the player was choosing a dog from a kennel. However, the debugging process for each version was deemed too time-consuming to be feasible.
This information is the same reason why we have game guides on Wikibooks. Putting the information here just because Wikipedia is bigger is a poor argument. We link to Wikibooks here. Just include a notice that a list of dog breeds is available on Nintendogs' Wikibooks page. - A Link to the Past 02:43, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
Nintendogs: A real-time pet simulation video game where players interact and train dogs, and in later entries, cats. Nintendogs: Nintendogs + Cats [1] Paper Mario: A sub-series of the Mario franchise where characters are flat like a sheet of paper in 3D space. Varying levels of role-playing video game elements are present across entries. Paper ...
Crosswords DS (stylized as CrossworDS and known as Nintendo Presents: Crossword Collection in PAL regions) is a puzzle video game developed by American studio Nuevo Retro games released by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS handheld video game console.
If the face is close to the camera, then the puppy will come up to lick it; they will also mimic a head tilt. [8] Competitions have five cups each: Junior, Amateur, Pro, Master, and Nintendogs. In addition to Disc Competition and Obedience Trial, there a new competition, Lure Coursing. The screen is in stereoscopic 3D.
The New York Times has used video games as part of its journalistic efforts, among the first publications to do so, [13] contributing to an increase in Internet traffic; [14] In the late 1990s and early 2000s, The New York Times began offering its newspaper online, and along with it the crossword puzzles, allowing readers to solve puzzles on their computers.
Players use the stylus to write the letters using handwriting recognition, with keyboard optional. [1] There are 1,000 puzzles with increasing levels of difficulty over the days of the week, just like the crosswords published in the New York Times (Mondays are easiest, Saturdays are hardest, and Sundays are significantly larger, but only the difficulty of a Thursday).
The puzzle follows a number of conventions, both for tradition's sake and to aid solvers in completing the crossword: Nearly all the Times crossword grids have rotational symmetry: they can be rotated 180 degrees and remain identical. Rarely, puzzles with only vertical or horizontal symmetry can be found; yet rarer are asymmetrical puzzles ...