"We will recommend that very young children not look at 3D images," warned Fils-Aime, adding, "That's because, [in] young children, the muscles for the eyes are not fully formed..."
They mean the 3DS that is. Now little children have another excuse for hating the older kids.
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The Nintendo of America president went on to clarify that this caveat isn't unique to the 3DS. "This is the same messaging that the industry is putting out with 3D movies, so it is a standard protocol," he explained. "We have the same type of messaging for the Virtual Boy, as an example."
Found this. Teehee
Last edited by RHY3756547 (2010-06-18 14:36:22)
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"What is the point of this topic?" Aidan, user of Scratch asks. "I don't see it."
lol. Just going along with the quoting.
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RHY3756547 wrote:
The Nintendo of America president went on to clarify that this caveat isn't unique to the 3DS. "This is the same messaging that the industry is putting out with 3D movies, so it is a standard protocol," he explained. "We have the same type of messaging for the Virtual Boy, as an example."
Found this. Teehee
The Virtual Boy was bad. I played on one, it burns your eyes.

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svinnik wrote:
RHY3756547 wrote:
The Nintendo of America president went on to clarify that this caveat isn't unique to the 3DS. "This is the same messaging that the industry is putting out with 3D movies, so it is a standard protocol," he explained. "We have the same type of messaging for the Virtual Boy, as an example."
Found this. TeeheeThe Virtual Boy was bad. I played on one, it burns your eyes.
The virtual boy was the worst piece of hardware invented. Basically with the 3DS, if watching, say, Avatar in 3D for 3 hours hurt your eyes then the 3DS probably will too, and vice versa.
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