Some Internal Specs Revealed for Nintendo’s Wii 2, Including High-Def Support

Time to start your wrist exercises: IGN has gotten its hands on new details about Nintendo’s upcoming Wii 2 console, codenamed “Project Café,” and the system’s specs look pretty beefy on paper. But we should preface this all by saying that Wii 2 is just a nickname for Nintendo’s Wii successor. According to IGN, Nintendo is floating around alternate names for the platform, including “Stream.”

 

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That name is itself interesting, as the Wii 2 will finally have the power to be able to output high-definition video–1080P content–but it’s still not expected to have a physical way to read HD content like Blu-ray discs.

The 1080P compatibility will be partially thanks to the custom-built tri-core IBM PowerPC chipset that’ll serve as the Wii 2’s brains. It’s going to be the same kind of setup that you’ll find on Microsoft’s Xbox 360 console. Only, Nintendo will allegedly up the clock speeds to beat out the three 64-bit, 3.2-Ghz processors of Microsoft’s competing device, among other enhancements.

To dispel previous rumors, Nintendo is not expected to switch up to AMD’s fusion platform. An AMD GPU will still power the graphics for the device, but it’ll come from a juiced-up version of the company’s R700 architecture.

And like its console peers, Nintendo might very mix a few features from AMD’s successor platform into the mix as well—R800, for those keeping track at home. The GPU should be able to tap into 512 megabytes of memory, which shouldn’t be confused with the undisclosed amount of physical RAM that the console itself will have.

In total, the specs should be enough to put the Wii 2 in direct graphical competition with the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. That’ll be a welcome relief for gamers that prefer better-looking titles: A common criticism of Nintendo’s predecessor platform was that the look and feel of the Wii’s games was a step back from the more realistic environments found in games for the Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3. Nintendo’s console also lacked high-definition support in the form of a physical HD-DVD or Blu-ray reader, and that’s not expected to change for the Wii 2.

Nintendo’s release of its Wii 2–currently pegged for April of 2012–comes at a critical juncture for the company. Its Wii console leads the U.S. console market in sales (34.5 million units sold as of April 2011), and Nintendo’s rumored 2012 launch of the Wii 2 will give the company at least two years or so of exclusivity before new offerings from Microsoft or Sony pop onto shelves. Will that be enough for Nintendo to cement its new console as a comparable offering–hardware-wise–for what rivals both have and have yet to offer?

The retail price of the Wii 2 is currently expected to clock around $350 to $400, based on the costs of the console’s rumored parts.

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