Nintendo hopes the video game device, dubbed Wii U, will reverse its slumping sales. It marries an iPad-like touch screen with a traditional controller and is scheduled to hit the market next year.
With sales of its 4 1/2-year-old Wii console plummeting and avid gamers spending most of their money on competing devices from Microsoft Corp. and Sony Corp., Nintendo Co. has unveiled a new console that it hopes will draw those players back.
The Japanese game company showed off the device, which marries an iPad-like  touch screen with a traditional controller, at a news conference  Tuesday morning before the official opening of the Electronic  Entertainment Expo trade show at the Los Angeles Convention Center.  Dubbed Wii U, it's scheduled to hit stores sometime between April and  December 2012.Nintendo sold more than 86 million Wiis since introducing the device in  2006, building a massive audience of women and older people who rarely  play games. But consumers appear to have tired of the device, with sales  dropping 25% in the first three months of 2011 compared with a year  earlier, according to ITG Investment Research.
 In addition, those who already own a Wii buy fewer games than owners of Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3, which led big publishers like Electronic Arts Inc. and Activision Blizzard Inc. to pull back on supporting Nintendo's console.
"The problem with average consumers is getting them to buy more games," said Billy Pidgeon, senior analyst with M2 Research.
Unlike its predecessor, Wii U features high-definition graphics and the multitude of buttons and triggers that serious gamers demand. By combining those elements with an easy-to-use touch screen, the company could attract hard-core gamers while keeping its appeal to more casual players, Nintendo President Satoru Iwata said.
 
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