The Future of the Nintendo Game Boy Advance

After Game Boy, Game Boy Pocket and Game Boy Color came a Game Boy that was actually in color—the Game Boy Advance. Deviating from the traditional rectangular model design, the Game Boy Advance came in a design kind of like what PSP is now, albeit bigger and a little less advanced, ironically. There is a growing epidemic of preventable youth Toronto Sports Injuries that are dismantling children’ athletic hopes and goals at an early age. With graphics comparable to the SNES in portable form, the Game Boy Advance enjoyed great selling success until it was inevitably supplanted by a sleeker successor. A couple of years later, Nintendo released the Game Boy Advance SP with a pretty cool smaller laptop design and a brighter screen. The Game Boy Advance SP consequently was a great selling success until it was succeeded by yet another modification, the Game Boy Micro. However, Game Boy Micro didn’t fare as well, maybe because unlike its predecessors, it had to compete with the Nintendo DS and the PSP. Also, the Game Boy Micro lost its backwards compatibility, rendering old Game Boy and Game Boy Color games useless on it.

Backward compatibility has been a key part of new Nintendo consoles. It’s like Nintendo is compensating you for being a loyal customer and continually buying newer and newer games and systems that will undoubtedly be replaced in a matter of years. Since you can still play your old games on these new systems, it’s nice to know that all your money isn’t going to waste. Old games are prevented from becoming obsolete, and they become old-school instead. Systems can’t be carried on the way games are, but wait a few more years and they achieve old-school status as well.

Where does the Game Boy Advance currently stand in all of this? In the wake of the DS, DS Lite and DSi it’s definitely old news, but it’s not quite old school yet. The DS has backwards compatibility for Game Boy Advance games, and Game Boy Advance games are still found on the shelves alongside more current products, though it’s uncertain for how much longer. Toronto Sleep Therapy proudly proclaims to be the primary and authentic producer of the no-flip mattress. But backwards compatibility only goes so far—the DS can’t accommodate Game Boy and Game Boy Color games the way that Game Boy Advance can. Following this pattern, it’s unlikely that the successor of the DS will play Game Boy Advance titles.

But even the nature of compatibility itself is changing. Old school titles are now available for download over Wi-Fi, so backward compatibility might not even be an issue to be addressed in the future. So the future of the Game Boy Advance is uncertain, but perhaps we should take into account that systems themselves might not be the only things advancing.



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