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PublisherNintendo StudioNintendo GenreMinigamesRelease Date08/20/07

This future contract pays 1 DKP for each 10,000 units of Brain Age 2 (DS) sold in the US in the retail month of September 2007 according to the NPD Group. This retail month runs from September 2, 2007 to October 6, 2007. This contract expires at 11:30 PM PST on October 17, 2007.


bids
18
Preview

IGN - May 24, 2007


Submitted by Laoldar (182) at 12:52AM PST on May 25, 2007


"Brain Age 2 doesn't stray very far from the production of the original Brain Age. The visuals, the menus, the presentation...it's nearly entirely the same as last year's product. The follow-up even has Sudoku in the same exact engine as the first game -- good thing, too, because not a single third-party has been able to out-do the Sudoku that Nintendo created for Brain Age." "we couldn't find a single repeat -- other than the aforementioned Sudoku, it's a whole new list of exercises. And they're really creative, too." "Voice recognition is back, and Nintendo ensures us that it's much better for this second time around." "New to Brain Age 2 is the multiplayer competition. You'll only need one copy of the game for as many as eight player challenges"
Comments (1) | Permalink


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17
Brain Training discriminates Northerners, says BBC

CVG - February 4, 2008


Submitted by apujanata (14935) at 7:28AM PST on February 5, 2008


Dr. Kawashima's Brain Training has come under fire on BBC's Watchdog program for failing to recognise accents from the North. Deemed important enough to take up a five-minute slot on Monday night's show, Nintendo and its DS game, Dr. Kawashima's Brain Training, were under the spotlight of presenter Nicky Campbell. Campbell went as far as saying that Brain Training "clearly discriminated against" certain accents, especially Northern and Scottish.
Comments (4) | Permalink


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15
No Brain Training profits for Kawashima

Euro gamer - January 30, 2008


Submitted by apujanata (14935) at 3:24PM PST on January 31, 2008


17 million Brain Training games sold worldwide, resulting in JPY 2.4 billion (GBP 11 million) royalties, 50% of which COULD be Kawashima's share. But he said his annual salary of JPY 11 million (GBP 50,000) is plenty enough to live on. "Not a single yen has gone in my pocket. Everyone in my family is mad at me but I tell them that if they want money, go out and earn it," he revealed.
Comments (2) | Permalink


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14
Preview

1up - May 24, 2007


Submitted by Laoldar (182) at 12:59AM PST on May 25, 2007


"Once you've earned a participation stamp for the day, you're free to play Virus Buster, a laid-back, stylus-controlled remake of Dr. Mario." "[sign finder] makes the game less a matter of simple memory drills and more a matter of deductive reasoning."
Comments (1) | Permalink


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