Electivirus
Not really, no.
and apparently at least SOME orchestration
Yeah, rather hard to tell with the game being 95% ambience, but most of the music is orchestrated, yes.
and apparently at least SOME orchestration
So I have bought Metroid Other M and Brawl and both don't work on my Wii. Are they other games like this? I hear its the Wii lens so do I buy a new Wii?
Cometstarlight said:No, wait until early spring so you can buy the Wii U that way you can play both wii games and wii u games, just a recommendation
One: This should be in tech help
Two: That is the worse advice you could ever give to a person as the WiiU has no price nor a release date.
Three: To the OP it sound likes that your Wii's lens just may need cleaning try buying a Wii's lens cleaning kit and see if that works.
Maybe if you had actually read the rest of the post you would already know I had said that
No, wait until early spring so you can buy the Wii U that way you can play both wii games and wii u games, just a recommendation
Cutscenes aren't enough to take up too much space either. At best, Tales of Symphonia 2 had lots of them.
I'm still suspecting the graphics.
Cutscenes aren't enough to take up too much space either. At best, Tales of Symphonia 2 had lots of them.
I'm still suspecting the graphics.
I'm surprised nobody in this thread has answered properly.
Well, dude, you have two options to fix the lens:
1) You can send your Wii to Nintendo to repair the lens.
2) I suspect your Wii's lens are dirty. Fortunately for you, Nintendo has released a lens clean up kit. You can only buy that online in their site though.
Brawl and Other M both have a two-layered disc.
Yes, some launch model Wiis have trouble reading dual-layered discs, of which both Brawl and Other M (among other games, such as Metroid Prime Trilogy; Skyward Sword will undoubtedly be one as well) are.
The disc cleaning method is the best known way to fix it, apart from sending in your Wii to Nintendo themselves.
These are the main posts to look at. Dual-layer discs don't agree well with most launch Wiis (not all, however, as mine has no issues with them and was purchased at launch). Simply call Nintendo to report the issue, replace your Wii or wait for a Wii U. Do not attempt fixing the Wii yourself.To answer the question: Your Wii's disc drive either has problems or, more likely, it just can't read dual-layered discs. Nintendo will repair your Wii for free if you have this issue, it's on their website.
As for Other M's being dual-layered, it was the cutscenes. It really had to be.
Audio could be a problem, though, as Nintendo Europe's making Xenoblade bilingual pushed the game to a dual-layered disc. But then again, it's a JRPG with a gigantic world.