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Amiibo [a] (/ ə ˈ m iː b oʊ /, ə-MEE-boh; stylized as amiibo; plural: Amiibo [1]) is a toys-to-life platform by Nintendo, which was launched in November 2014. It consists of a wireless communications and storage protocol for connecting figurines to the Wii U , Nintendo 3DS , and Nintendo Switch video game consoles .
Toys-to-life is a video game feature using physical figurines or action figures to interact within the game. [1] These toys use a near field communication (NFC), radio frequency identification (RFID), or image recognition data protocol to determine the individual figurine's proximity, and save a player's progress data to a storage medium located within that piece. [2]
This category is for articles concerning games that support figurines, cards, and other NFC-embedded items under Nintendo's Amiibo brand, Amiibos are NFC toys exclusive to the Wii U, Nintendo 3DS, and Nintendo Switch.
A demo of Super Mario World. Amiibo Tap allows the player to scan an Amiibo figure from any physical series of figures on the Wii U GamePad to unlock demos of 30 video games by Nintendo that were originally released for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) and Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). [1]
This is a list of released video games for the Wii and Wii U video game consoles which allow use of the Balance Board accessory. The first game to support this accessory is Wii Fit . Wii
A liquid crystal shutter headset which gave compatible games the illusion of 3D depth, like the Master System's SegaScope 3D glasses. Nintendo: Famicom Data Recorder: Device for saving and loading programs onto standard audio cassettes for programs made in Family BASIC.
All previously released amiibo figurines compatible with the prior Super Smash Bros. games, including the Ryu figurine, will retain compatibility with Ultimate. Ken from Street Fighter was also included in Ultimate as a new echo fighter and received a new amiibo figurine at retail.
Nintendo Network-compatible games feature a small logo on top of the banner, but as of November 2014, the small Amiibo logo is dominantly featured instead, even if said games also supported Nintendo Network. The Nintendo Network logo will continue to feature if Amiibo support is definitely absent.