var zIoa1 = new Array('Relevant Articles:','PSP Specs (playstation.about.com)','http://playstation.about.com/od/psp/a/PSPSpecs.htm'); var zIoa2 = new Array('Elsewhere on the Web','Handheld Impressions','http://gamesfirst.com/v4/index.php?m=l&i=96','Nintendo vs. Sony Undercard - Handheld Circuit','http://gamesfirst.com/v4/index.php?m=l&i=410'); [an error occurred while processing this directive]
Email to a friendPrint this page
Relevant Articles:

PSP Specs (playstation.about.com)

Elsewhere on the Web

Handheld ImpressionsNintendo vs. Sony Undercard - Handheld Circuit

Handheld Wars: Sony PSP vs. Nintendo DS

by Aaron Stanton

A Buyer's Guide to Portable Gaming

Games:

The PSP and the Nintendo DS will both have great games, each with their fair share of exclusive titles. The DS will have Zelda, already has Mario, and the PSP will tout Sony exclusives. Though I’m cheering for the touch screen capacity of the DS (see below), only time will tell which system wins out in the software war. There is, however, a huge advantage that goes to the Nintendo DS: backwards compatibility. With the PS2 and the GameCube, the home consoles, Sony’s system has hundreds of more titles than the GameCube when you include both PS and PS2 games. In the handheld market, though, Nintendo has the situation reversed. The Nintendo DS is capable of playing Gameboy Advance games, which are about as good in terms of graphics as the old Super Nintendo game system. At this moment, two months after launch, this gives the DS around 800 announced titles, 63 of them designed from the ground up for the DS, compared to the PSP’s 75. These titles include classic games that are amazingly addictive, with games like Zelda: A Link to the Past, Four Swords, and Minish Cap. Not only is Mario 64 available for the DS, but you can also play versions of Super Mario World, Mario Brothers 2, and Mario Brothers 3. There are tons of good games that can be picked up for cheap, and they’re all available right now, off the shelves, for the Nintendo DS. It’s an advantage that simply can’t be ignored.

Features Unique to Either System:

Here is where the direct comparison has to end. There are certain features that the Nintendo DS has that the PSP simply does not, and vice-versa. There are things that the PSP is designed to do that the DS never will. It a lot of ways, these features here are the deciding factors between the systems.