Lol I have to be honest, I never knew what they were for. I had a few small packets of them with Link, Mario, and Kirby. Possibly also the Samus? one as it seems familiar, but I'm not sure
Lol I have to be honest, I never knew what they were for. I had a few small packets of them with Link, Mario, and Kirby. Possibly also the Samus? one as it seems familiar, but I'm not sure
The first ds that came out. The camera was used to scan those and you could play with them. They also were used for something else but I cannot remember
3DS built in camera app. It was mostly to show off the AR capabilities of the handheld. The ? Block had the most interesting use as you could make the Earth appear and shoot meteors or bombs into the planet and could then make it explode where an ominous message would appear warning you to take care of the planet. The cuckoo clock was also pretty cool as you could make the bird popping out come closer to the screen and it would actually break the fourth wall and make it look like it damaged the 3DS while destroying the clock at the same time. Very few 3DS games used the AR. The Gen VII Pokémon games are probably the best known and widely used games that used the technology that players actually used it for and then there’s Kingdom Hearts Dream Drop Distance which came with three random cards of the newest creature in the game (can’t remember what they’re called) that functioned as a virtual pet simulator.
3DS built in camera app. It was mostly to show off the AR capabilities of the handheld. The ? Block had the most interesting use as you could make the Earth appear and shoot meteors or bombs into the planet and could then make it explode where an ominous message would appear warning you to take care of the planet. The cuckoo clock was also pretty cool as you could make the bird popping out come closer to the screen and it would actually break the fourth wall and make it look like it damaged the 3DS while destroying the clock at the same time. Very few 3DS games used the AR. The Gen VII Pokémon games are probably the best known and widely used games that used the technology that players actually used it for and then there’s Kingdom Hearts Dream Drop Distance which came with three random cards of the newest creature in the game (can’t remember what they’re called) that functioned as a virtual pet simulator.