I have a problem with the Quiz Result answers...
6. What company developed the eReader card scanning technology?
• Nintendo
• Fujitsu
• Samsung
• Olympus Optical
Your answer: Nintendo
The correct answer was: Olympus Optical
This was actually made by Nintendo, SOURCE : e-Reader Wiki
The e-Reader (???e????, K?do ? R?d??, Card e-Reader) is a device made by Nintendo for its Game Boy Advance portable video game system. It has an LED scanner that reads "e-Reader Cards," paper cards with specially encoded data printed on them.
14. How many copies did a game have to sell before making it into Nintendo's "Player's Choice" program?
• 1,000,000
• 500,000
• 400,000
• 250,000
Your answer: 250,000
The correct answer was: 1,000,000
The corrrect answer is actually 250,000, SOURCE : Player's Choice Wiki
In the United States and Europe, Nintendo introduced the label in 1996 for both the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and the Game Boy, and later applied it to the Nintendo 64 and Game Boy Advance, to distinguish titles that have sold over one million copies. The label is also applied to Nintendo GameCube games that sold more than 250,000 copies.[1] A Player's Choice program has not been implemented for the Wii or Nintendo DS, despite the existence of multiple million-selling games.
PLEASE, if anyone can show me otherwise, I'd be grateful. I just think its unfair for those who actually were supposed to get these right, did not get a chance to win them.
6. What company developed the eReader card scanning technology?
• Nintendo
• Fujitsu
• Samsung
• Olympus Optical
Your answer: Nintendo
The correct answer was: Olympus Optical
This was actually made by Nintendo, SOURCE : e-Reader Wiki
The e-Reader (???e????, K?do ? R?d??, Card e-Reader) is a device made by Nintendo for its Game Boy Advance portable video game system. It has an LED scanner that reads "e-Reader Cards," paper cards with specially encoded data printed on them.
14. How many copies did a game have to sell before making it into Nintendo's "Player's Choice" program?
• 1,000,000
• 500,000
• 400,000
• 250,000
Your answer: 250,000
The correct answer was: 1,000,000
The corrrect answer is actually 250,000, SOURCE : Player's Choice Wiki
In the United States and Europe, Nintendo introduced the label in 1996 for both the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and the Game Boy, and later applied it to the Nintendo 64 and Game Boy Advance, to distinguish titles that have sold over one million copies. The label is also applied to Nintendo GameCube games that sold more than 250,000 copies.[1] A Player's Choice program has not been implemented for the Wii or Nintendo DS, despite the existence of multiple million-selling games.
PLEASE, if anyone can show me otherwise, I'd be grateful. I just think its unfair for those who actually were supposed to get these right, did not get a chance to win them.