Editing E-Reader

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|title=e-Reader
|title=e-Reader
|image=[[File:E-reader-1-.jpg|250px]]
|image=[[File:E-reader-1-.jpg|250px]]
|release={{release|Japan|December 1, 2001<ref>{{cite|url=www.nintendo.co.jp/n08/hardware/card_e|accessdate=May 6, 2024|title=カードeリーダー|publisher=Nintendo (www.nintendo.co.jp)}}</ref>|USA|September 16, 2002<ref>{{cite|url=www.nintendoworldreport.com/news/7629/e-reader-release-date-and-details|title=E-Reader release date and details!|author=Berghammer, Billy|date=August 7, 2002|publisher=Nintendo World Report|accessdate=May 6, 2024}}</ref>|Mexico|September 16, 2002<ref>{{cite|archive=web.archive.org/web/20021013214530/http://www.nintendo.com.mx/Productos/gameboyadvance/ereader.html|title=Nintendo-Productos-e-Reader|publisher=Nintendo of Mexico (www.nintendo.com.mx)|date=November 28, 2022}}</ref>|Australia|October 31, 2003<ref>{{cite|archive=web.archive.org/web/20031202222005/http://www.nintendo.com.au/nintendo/news/index.php|title=News from Nintendo|publisher=Nintendo of Australia (www.nintendo.com.au)}}</ref>}}
|release={{release|Japan|December 1, 2001<ref>https://www.nintendo.co.jp/n08/hardware/card_e/</ref>|USA|September 16, 2002<ref> https://www.nintendoworldreport.com/news/7629/e-reader-release-date-and-details</ref>|Mexico|September 16, 2002<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20021013214530/http://www.nintendo.com.mx/Productos/gameboyadvance/ereader.html Official Mexican Website]. From the Original [http://www.nintendo.com.mx/Productos/gameboyadvance/ereader.html]. Retrived November 28, 2022.</ref>|Australia|October 31, 2003<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20031202222005/http://www.nintendo.com.au/nintendo/news/index.php</ref>}}
|discontinued={{release|USA|Spring 2004<ref name=Discont>{{cite|author=Heaton, A. P.|date=July 19, 2021|url=gamerant.com/rare-e3-nintendo-e-reader-card-worth-thousands-dollars|title=Rare E3 Nintendo e-Reader Card is Selling for Thousands of Dollars|publisher=Game Rant|accessdate=April 14, 2022}}</ref>{{better source}}|Japan|September 2008<ref name=Discont/>}}
|discontinued={{release|USA|Spring 2004<ref name=Discont>Heaton, A. P. (July 19, 2021). [https://gamerant.com/rare-e3-nintendo-e-reader-card-worth-thousands-dollars Rare E3 Nintendo e-Reader Card is Selling for Thousands of Dollars]. ''Game Rant''. Retrieved April 14, 2022.{{better source}}</ref>|Japan|September 2008<ref name=Discont/>}}
}}
}}
[[File:E-Reader.svg|250px|left|Logo]]
[[File:E-Reader.svg|250px|left|Logo]]
The '''{{wp|Nintendo e-Reader|e-Reader}}''' is an add-on device for the [[Game Boy Advance]] released in 2001 that can read dot codes on special cards and interpret them into data. While it is compatible with the Game Boy Advance SP, it does not mount properly without an attachable plastic cover for the link socket that was available only in Australia and the later Japanese release. Depending on the card, the data may contain either information or some type of [[minigame]]. Several [[Nintendo Entertainment System]] games were also made available on special packs of cards, but the 2-player modes have been removed. It took a total of nine or ten dot codes (two per card) to store the data of an NES game.
The '''{{wp|Nintendo e-Reader|e-Reader}}''' is an add-on device for the [[Game Boy Advance]] released in 2001 that can read dot codes on special cards and interpret them into data. While it is compatible with the Game Boy Advance SP, it does not mount properly without an attachable plastic cover for the link socket that was available only in Australia and the later Japanese release. Depending on the card, the data may contain either information or some type of [[minigame]]. Several [[Nintendo Entertainment System]] games were also made available on special packs of cards, but the 2-player modes have been removed. It took a total of nine or ten dot codes (two per card) to store the data of an NES game.


There are two versions of the e-Reader.<ref>{{cite|url=ereader.no-intro.org/info.php?set=Hardware|title=e-Reader Encyclopedia: Hardware|accessdate=February 11, 2023}}</ref> The original 2001 version, which never left Japan, had no linking capabilities, and thus was unable to be used for games such as ''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]''. It also could not store games due to memory limitations. In 2002, Nintendo added linking capabilities, the ability to store games, and emulate NES titles when it released this new version in North America. This updated version was released as the "Card e-Reader +" in Japan in 2003. Japanese e-Readers, regardless of the version, cannot read foreign e-Reader cards. The same is true for foreign e-Readers and Japanese cards.<ref>{{cite|publisher=Aqua 'N 'Game|url=www.aquangame.com/e-reader-amerique-australie|title=''L’histoire de l’e-Reader – à la conquête de l’Amérique et de l’Australie''|accessdate=February 11, 2023}}</ref>
There are two versions of the e-Reader.<ref>[https://ereader.no-intro.org/info.php?set=Hardware e-Reader Encyclopedia: Hardware]. Retrieved February 11, 2023.</ref> The original 2001 version, which never left Japan, had no linking capabilities, and thus was unable to be used for games such as ''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]''. It also could not store games due to memory limitations. In 2002, Nintendo added linking capabilities, the ability to store games, and emulate NES titles when it released this new version in North America. This updated version was released as the "Card e-Reader +" in Japan in 2003. Japanese e-Readers, regardless of the version, cannot read foreign e-Reader cards. The same is true for foreign e-Readers and Japanese cards.<ref>Aqua 'N 'Game. [https://www.aquangame.com/e-reader-amerique-australie/ ''L’histoire de l’e-Reader – à la conquête de l’Amérique et de l’Australie'']. Retrieved February 11, 2023.</ref>


The e-Reader was packaged with either ''[[Donkey Kong Jr. (game)|Donkey Kong Jr.-e]]'' or ''[[Pinball (game)|Pinball-e]]'' and a "sampler pack" containing cards from other franchises.
The e-Reader was packaged with either ''[[Donkey Kong Jr. (game)|Donkey Kong Jr.-e]]'' or ''[[Pinball (game)|Pinball-e]]'' and a "sampler pack" containing cards from other franchises.
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*Demo Cards: Upon scanning a Demo Card, the player was treated to recording of how to either uncover a secret in a level, or see a single-level speedrun.
*Demo Cards: Upon scanning a Demo Card, the player was treated to recording of how to either uncover a secret in a level, or see a single-level speedrun.
*Level Cards: Probably the most desired, scanning these would add brand new levels into the game.
*Level Cards: Probably the most desired, scanning these would add brand new levels into the game.
The device was never released in Europe, with Nintendo saying "the market potential wasn’t great enough".<ref>{{cite|url=www.eurogamer.net/articles/news080704ereader|title=Nintendo will not release E-Reader in Europe|author=Bramwell, Tom|date=July 8, 2004|publisher=Eurogamer|accessdate=May 6, 2024}}</ref> As a result, e-Reader functionality was absent in the European versions of the respective games.{{ref needed}}<!--Is the e-Reader content in European games the same as in America, where the content is added with different requirements, or it is removed entirely? Might differ from game to game.--> In 2004, Nintendo discontinued the e-Reader outside of Japan due to low sales. However, it was supported in Japan until the end of the Game Boy Advance's lifespan. Many cards, particularly the new ''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' levels and a set of bonus levels for ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong]]'', were never seen elsewhere. The unreleased ''Super Mario Advance 4'' levels were eventually made available internationally when the game was released on the [[Wii U]] [[Virtual Console]], which has all of [[World-e]] unlocked from the start. In 2023, these levels would also be made available again on [[Game Boy Advance - Nintendo Switch Online]].
The device was never released in Europe, with Nintendo saying "the market potential wasn’t great enough".<ref>https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/news080704ereader</ref> As a result, e-Reader functionality was absent in the European versions of the respective games.{{ref needed}}<!--Is the e-Reader content in European games the same as in America, where the content is added with different requirements, or it is removed entirely? Might differ from game to game.--> In 2004, Nintendo discontinued the e-Reader outside of Japan due to low sales. However, it was supported in Japan until the end of the Game Boy Advance's lifespan. Many cards, particularly the new ''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' levels and a set of bonus levels for ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong]]'', were never seen elsewhere. The unreleased ''Super Mario Advance 4'' levels were eventually made available internationally when the game was released on the [[Wii U]] [[Virtual Console]], which has all of [[World-e]] unlocked from the start. In 2023, these levels would also be made available again on [[Game Boy Advance - Nintendo Switch Online]].


There was a [[List of unreleased media#Game & Watch-e|plan for an e-Reader line]] that featured classic and ''Super Mario''-themed modern versions of various [[Game & Watch]] games similar to the ''[[Game & Watch Gallery (series)|Game & Watch Gallery]]'' series, but it was canceled.<ref>{{cite|url=www.nintendoworldreport.com/forums/index.php?topic=32861.0|title=Game and Watch-e: What was meant to be|publisher=Nintendo World Report Forums|accessdate=September 23, 2023}}</ref>{{better source}} The ''[[Mario Kart: Super Circuit]]'' website suggested that e-Reader compatibility might have been planned for this game.{{ref needed}}
There was a [[List of unreleased media#Game & Watch-e|plan for an e-Reader line]] that featured classic and ''Super Mario''-themed modern versions of various [[Game & Watch]] games similar to the ''[[Game & Watch Gallery (series)|Game & Watch Gallery]]'' series, but it was canceled.<ref>[https://www.nintendoworldreport.com/forums/index.php?topic=32861.0 Game and Watch-e: What was meant to be]. ''Nintendo World Report Forums''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref> The ''[[Mario Kart: Super Circuit]]'' website suggested that e-Reader compatibility might have been planned for this game.{{ref needed}}


==Compatible games==
==Compatible games==

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