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Restoring a Nintendo DS Lite imported from Japan. This video showcases the restoration process, highlighting the tools and techniques used to bring this classic gaming device back to life.
Price: US$129.99 (shop for this item. Note: DS Lite listings are mixed in with regular Nintendo DS listings.) I've bought so many Game Boy products in my life that I wish I could subscribe to a ...
Exactly one year ago today, Nintendo of America launched the retooled version of the Nintendo DS. The Nintendo DS Lite, launched on June 11, 2005, turned an admittedly bulky system into a thing of ...
The Nintendo DS Lite is, to this date, the most popular handheld that Nintendo has ever made. It’s arrival in June 2006 couldn’t have come at a better time for Nintendo.
DS Lite will, as promised, ship in three color variations on March 2: Crystal White, Ice Blue and Enamel Navy. Each system comes bundled with two touch pens of the same color as the hardware, a ...
DS Lite going tri-color. Slimmed-down version of Nintendo's handheld will come in ice and navy blue as well as white; GBA compatibility confirmed. By Hirohiko Niizumi on February 10, ...
Nintendo fans discover a scrapped Nintendo DS Lite feature that would have allowed a playstyle similar to the Wii U and Switch in docked modes.
Nintendo DS Lite and Sony PSP Comparison. Bizarrely, there’s no switch provided through which to change brightness settings, as on the recently reworked Game Boy Advance SP.
The DS Lite itself is a much-improved sibling to its predecessor. It's less than two-thirds the size of the original, 20 percent lighter and most importantly has a much brighter screen that has ...
The Nintendo DS Lite was a necessary refinement back in 2006. Contributing to around 94 million of the DS family's 154 million sales, this slimline variant proved highly successful, but 15 years ...
Nintendo drops DS Lite price to $99, re-launches classic titles and makes the last-gen machine a hard-to-beat bargain.
It's not that big of a surprise, but the DS Lite is already doing well in Japan. According to reports the lines are longer than they were at the first DS launch, although still not up to PSP ...