Philips CD-i: Difference between revisions

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The '''[[wikipedia:Philips CD-i|Philips CD-i]]''' is a multimedia CD player developed by [[Royal Philips Electronics]] and released in North America and Europe. As a video game console, it was one of the first to use a CD format for games. The CD-i was originally released in 1991 at the price of $700 in the United States.
The '''[[wikipedia:Philips CD-i|Philips CD-i]]''' is a multimedia CD player developed by [[Royal Philips Electronics]] and released in North America and Europe. As a video game console, it was one of the first to use a CD format for games. The CD-i was originally released in 1991 at the price of $700 in the United States.


[[Nintendo]] originally made a deal with Philips to develop an add-on for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] to allow it to play CD-based games, after having previously made a deal with [[wikipedia:Sony|Sony]]. The project was later aborted, but Philips was able to obtain the rights to deCD-i using some of Nintendo's intellectual properties.
[[Nintendo]] originally made a deal with Philips to develop an add-on for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] to allow it to play CD-based games, after having previously made a deal with [[wikipedia:Sony|Sony]]. The project was later aborted, but Philips was able to obtain the rights to Nintendo's intellectual properties for us on the CD-i.


Using Nintendo's licenses, Philips released three games for ''[[zeldawiki:The Legend of Zelda (Series)|The Legend of Zelda]]'' series, one for the ''[[Mario (series)|Mario]]'' series ([[Mario Takes America|two]] [[Super Mario's Wacky Worlds|more]] were planned but were [[List of Cancelled Games and Vaporware|cancelled]]), and a version of ''[[wikipedia:Tetris|Tetris]]''. The ''The Legend of Zelda'' and ''Mario'' games received very bad reception, and the system generally sold poorly. In 1998, Philips announced that the CD-i had been discontinued.
Using Nintendo's licenses, Philips released three games for ''[[zeldawiki:The Legend of Zelda (Series)|The Legend of Zelda]]'' series, one for the ''[[Mario (series)|Mario]]'' series ([[Mario Takes America|two]] [[Super Mario's Wacky Worlds|more]] were planned but were [[List of Cancelled Games and Vaporware|cancelled]]), and a version of ''[[wikipedia:Tetris|Tetris]]''. The ''The Legend of Zelda'' and ''Mario'' games received very bad reception, and the system generally sold poorly. In 1998, Philips announced that the CD-i had been discontinued.

Revision as of 09:26, December 6, 2014

Template:System-Infobox The Philips CD-i is a multimedia CD player developed by Royal Philips Electronics and released in North America and Europe. As a video game console, it was one of the first to use a CD format for games. The CD-i was originally released in 1991 at the price of $700 in the United States.

Nintendo originally made a deal with Philips to develop an add-on for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System to allow it to play CD-based games, after having previously made a deal with Sony. The project was later aborted, but Philips was able to obtain the rights to Nintendo's intellectual properties for us on the CD-i.

Using Nintendo's licenses, Philips released three games for The Legend of Zelda series, one for the Mario series (two more were planned but were cancelled), and a version of Tetris. The The Legend of Zelda and Mario games received very bad reception, and the system generally sold poorly. In 1998, Philips announced that the CD-i had been discontinued.

Mario games

Unannounced Donkey Kong title

A Donkey Kong game was apparently in development for the system. The only known report of it is the LinkedIn resume of programmer Adrian Jackson-Jones, which states the game was in development during the 1992-1993 period at RSP. Jackson-Jones "designed and implemented the game engine" for the project[1].

References

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