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{{HardwareInfobox | image = GameCube Logo.png | image2 = Hardware-GameCube.png | manufacturer = Nintendo | type = Home Console | generation = Sixth | jp_rel = {{Release|2001|September|14|JP}} | na_rel = {{Release|2001|November|18|NA}} | eu_rel = {{Release|2002|May|3|EU}} | media = GameCube Game Disc | save = [[GameCube Memory Card]] | input = GameCube Controller | network = [[Game Boy Advance]] connectivity | unitssold = Over 20 million worldwide | topgame = [[Super Smash Bros. Melee]] | variants = Panasonic Q | predecessor = Nintendo 64 | successor = Wii | competitors = PlayStation 2,Dreamcast,Xbox }} The '''''GameCube''''' (originally code-named "'''Dolphin'''" during development; abbreviated as '''GC''') is [[Nintendo]]'s fourth home [[video game console]], and part of the [[Video game console generations|sixth-generation]] of video game consoles. It is a cube-shaped, 4-player console with features such as [[Nintendo GameCube#Connectivity|GBA connectivity]] and unsupported [[online]] play. The GameCube uses a unique storage medium, a proprietary format based on [[Matsushita]]'s optical-disc technology; the discs are approximately 8 centimeters (3 1/8 inches) in diameter (considerably smaller than a standard [[compact disc|CD]] or [[DVD]]), and the discs have a capacity of approximately 1.5 [[gigabyte]]s. The Nintendo GameCube does not have any [[DVD]]-movie support, but a Nintendo GameCube hybrid product containing movie functionality has been released by Matsushita in Japan, named [[Panasonic Q|"DVD/GAME Player Q."]] ==Games== ===Key first-party titles=== The GameCube software library contains such traditional Nintendo series as ''[[Mario|Super Mario]]'', ''[[The Legend of Zelda series|The Legend of Zelda]]'', and ''[[Metroid series|Metroid]]''. Some of the more noteworthy Nintendo published titles include: {|- | valign=top| * ''[[Animal Crossing]]'' * ''[[Donkey Kong Jungle Beat]]'' * ''[[Donkey Konga]]'', ''[[Donkey Konga 2]]'' (Developed by [[Namco]]) * ''[[Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem]]'' (Developed by [[Silicon Knights]]) * ''[[F-Zero GX]]'' (Developed by [[SEGA]]/[[Amusement Vision]]) * ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' * ''[[Mario Kart: Double Dash!!]]'' * ''[[Mario Power Tennis]]'' (Developed by [[Camelot Software Planning]]) * ''[[Metroid Prime]]'', ''[[Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]'' (Developed by [[Retro Studios]]) * ''[[Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes]]'' (Developed by [[Silicon Knights]]/[[Konami]]) | valign=top| * ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'' * ''[[Pikmin]]'', ''[[Pikmin 2]]'' * ''[[Pokémon Colosseum]]'' * ''[[Star Wars Rogue Leader: Rogue Squadron 2]]'' (Developed by [[Factor 5]]) * ''[[Super Mario Sunshine]]'' * ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' * ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker]]'' * ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess]]'' * ''[[Wave Race: Blue Storm]]'' |} ===Major third-party titles=== {|- | valign=top| * ''[[Baten Kaitos]]'' ([[Namco]]) * ''[[Final Fantasy: Crystal Chronicles]]'' ([[Square Enix]]) * ''[[Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time]]'' ([[UbiSoft]]) * ''[[Resident Evil Zero]]'', ''[[Resident Evil]]'' (enhanced remake), ''[[Resident Evil 2]]'' (enhanced remake), ''[[Resident Evil 3: Nemesis]]'' (enhanced remake), ''[[Resident Evil 4]]'' ([[Capcom]]) * ''[[Sonic Heroes]]'' ([[SEGA]]) * ''[[Soulcalibur II]]'' ([[Namco]]) | valign=top| * ''[[SSX 3]]'' ([[EA]]) * ''[[Super Monkey Ball]]'', ''[[Super Monkey Ball 2]]'' ([[Sega]]/[[Amusement Vision]]) * ''[[Tales of Symphonia]]'' ([[Namco]]) * ''[[TimeSplitters 2]]'', ''[[TimeSplitters 3]]'' ([[Free Radical Design]]) * ''[[Viewtiful Joe]]'', ''[[Viewtiful Joe 2]]'' ([[Capcom]]) |} ===Sample Screenshots=== <div align="center"> <gallery> Resident_evil_4_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Resident Evil 4]]''<br>[[Capcom]] Wind_waker_screenshot1.jpg|''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[EAD]] (2003) Twilight_princess_screenshot1.jpg|''[[The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[EAD]] (2005) Metroid_prime_2_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[Retro Studios]] (2004) Soulcalibur2_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Soulcalibur II]]''<br>[[Namco]] Ssx3_screenshot1.jpg|''[[SSX 3]]''<br>[[EA]] Star_wars_rouge_squadron2_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Star Wars Rogue Leader: Rogue Squadron II]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[Factor 5]] (2001) Pikmin2_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Pikmin 2]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[EA]] (2004) F-Zero_GX_screenshot1.jpg|''[[F-Zero GX]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[SEGA]]/[[Amusement Vision]] (2003) Super_monkey_ball2_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Super Monkey Ball 2]]''<br>[[SEGA]]/[[Amusement Vision]] (2003) Donkey_kong_jungle_beat_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Donkey Kong Jungle Beat]]''<br>[[Nintendo]] (2005) Viewtiful_joe2_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Viewtiful Joe 2]]''<br>[[Capcom]] (2003) File:25106-luigi-s-mansion-gamecube-screenshot-a-boss-ghost.jpg|''[[Luigi's Mansion]]''<br>[[Nintendo]] (2001) Super_mario_sunshine_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Super Mario Sunshine]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[EAD]] (2002) Eternal_darkness_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[Silicon Knights]] (2002) Madden_2005_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Madden NFL 2005]]''<br>[[EA]] (2004) Smash_brothers_melee_screenshot1.jpg|''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''<br>[[Nintendo]] (2001) File:591296-mario-kart-double-dash-gamecube-screenshot-fireball-special.png|''[[Mario Kart: Double Dash]]''<br>[[Nintendo]] (2003) File:178752-Mario Power Tennis (v1.01)-1495387554.png|''[[Mario Power Tennis]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[Camelot Software Planning]] (2004) File:Paper Mario Thousand Year Door screenshot.jpg|''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]''<br>[[Nintendo]]/[[Intelligent Systems]] (2004) Nba_street3_screenshot1.jpg|''[[NBA Street V3]]''<br>[[EA]] (2005) </gallery> </div> ==Hardware specifications== The following are hardware specifications provided by [[Nintendo]] of America. ===[[Central processing unit]]=== * Name: "Gekko" * Producer: [[International Business Machines|IBM]] * Core Base: [[PowerPC]] 750CXe, 43-mm² die (modified PowerPC 750 RISC with 50 new instructions) * Manufacturing Process: 0.18 micrometre IBM copper-wire technology * Clock Frequency: 485 [[MHz]] * CPU Capacity: 1125 Dmips ([[Dhrystone]] 2.1) * Internal Data Precision: ** [[32-bit]] Integer ** [[64-bit]] Floating-point, usable as 2 x [[32-bit]] [[SIMD]] * External Bus: ** 1.3 [[GiB]]/second peak bandwidth ** [[32-bit]] address space ** [[64-bit]] data bus; 162 [[MHz]] clock * [[CPU cache|Internal Cache]]: ** L1: instruction 32 [[KiB]], data 32 [[KiB]] (8-way) ** L2: 256 [[KiB]] (2-way) ===[[Graphics processing unit]]=== * Name: "Flipper" * Producer: [[ArtX]]/Nintendo (ArtX was acquired by [[ATi Technologies]] in 2000 and became part of ATi, who later merged with AMD) * Manufacturing Process: 0.18 micrometre [[NEC Corporation|NEC]] embedded [[DRAM]] process * Clock Frequency: 162 MHz * Embedded [[Frame Buffer]]: ** Approximately 2 [[megabyte]]s in capacity ** Sustainable [[latency]] of 6.2 nanoseconds ** RAM type is [[1T-SRAM]] * Embedded Texture Cache: ** Approximately 1 megabyte in capacity ** Sustainable latency of 6.2 nanoseconds (6.2ns) ** RAM type is 1T-SRAM * Texture Read Bandwidth: 10.4 [[gigabyte]]s/second (at peak) * Main Memory Bandwidth: 2.6 gigabytes/second (at peak) * Fill Rate: 648 [[megapixel]]s/second * Pixel Depth: ** 24-bit [[RGB]] / [[RGBA]] ** 24-bit [[Z-buffering|Z-buffer]] * Image Processing Functions: ** Fog ** Subpixel [[anti-aliasing]] ** 8 hardware lights ** [[Alpha blending]] ** Virtual texture design ** Multi-texturing, [[bump mapping]] ** [[Environment mapping]] ** [[Mipmap|MIP mapping]] ** [[Bilinear filtering]] ** [[Trilinear filtering]] ** [[Anisotropic filtering]] ** Real-time hardware texture decompression ([[S3TC]]) ** Real-time decompression of display list ** Hardware 3-line deflickering filter ===Aural functionality=== * Producer: Macronix * Clock Frequency: 81 MHz * Instruction Memory: ** 8 kilobytes of RAM ** 8 kilobytes of ROM * Data Memory: ** 8 kilobytes of RAM ** 4 kilobytes of ROM * Simultaneous Channels: 64 channels * Encoding: [[ADPCM]] * Sampling Frequency: 48 kHz ===Other system specifications=== * System Floating-point Arithmetic Capability: 10.5 [[FLOPS|GFLOPS]] (at peak) (MPU, Geometry Engine, HW Lighting Total) * Real-world Polygon Performance: 6 million to 12 million polygons/second (at peak) (assuming actual game conditions with complex models, fully textured, fully lit, etc.)* * Main RAM: ** Approximately 24 megabytes in capacity ** Sustainable latency of 10 nanoseconds ** RAM type is 1T-SRAM * Auxiliary RAM: ** Approximately 16 megabytes in capacity ** 81 MHz in speed ** RAM type is [[DRAM]] * Disc Drive: ** Drive type is [[Constant Angular Velocity]] (CAV) ** Average access time is 128 milliseconds ** Data transfer speed is between 2 megabytes per second and 3.125 megabytes per second * Disc Media: ** Based on [[DVD]] technology ** Diameter is 3 inches in length ** Producer is [[Matsushita]] (Also known as [[Panasonic]]) ** Approximately 1.5 gigabytes in capacity * Controller Ports: 4 * Memory Card Slots: 2 * Analog Audio/Video Outputs: 1 * Digital Video Outputs: 1 * * High-speed [[Serial port|Serial Ports]]: 2 * High-speed [[Parallel port|Parallel Ports]]: 1 * Power Supply: AC Adapter DC12 volts x 3.25 amperes * Physical Measurements of Entire System: 110 mm (H) x 150 mm (W) x 161 mm (D). [4.3"(H) x 5.9"(W) x 6.3"(D)] :<nowiki>* The Digital output was removed in a hardware revision in May 2004. Models without the port are DOL-101. </nowiki>[http://www.nintendo.com/consumer/systems/nintendogamecube/component_faq.jsp] ==Official Nintendo accessories== ===Controllers and removable storage=== * Controller (Standard colours include Purple, Black, Orange, Silver or Purple and clear. There are also many limited edition controllers available such as a split Silver and Red, with the Mario "M" logo replacing the regular GameCube logo seen on standard controllers.) ** GameCube controllers consist of a rumble motor, two analog sticks (one labeled as c-stick), a [[D-Pad]], L/R analog trigger buttons (each with a digital click), a digital trigger button (z button, located above the R-Trigger), and 4 face buttons. The face buttons are distinctively shaped so that players can rely on feeling the shape of the button instead of memorizing button locations. ** In 2003, Nintendo released the [[Wavebird]] ([[Radio frequency|RF]] wireless controller), a variation of the Gamecube Controller that uses RF for wireless play. Using two AA batteries, the Wavebird can last up to 80 hours of use on one set of batteries. * Memory Card (59, 251 or 1019 blocks. A maximum of 127 files can be stored on a memory card) * GameCube Game Boy Advance Cable (for games that support connectivity between the GameCube and the [[Game Boy Advance]]) * Modem or Broadband adapter (for internet or [[LAN]] play) * [[Game Boy Player]] (to play [[Game Boy]] games on the television, using either a GameCube controller or a connected Game Boy Advance) * [[Component video]] cable (for progressive scan ([[480p]]) support) which requires a GameCube with Digital Video Output. Less than one percent of GameCube owners used 480p, therefore the digital output was eventually removed from the design to reduce the system's manufacturing costs. See System Specifications above and [http://www.nintendo.com/consumer/systems/nintendogamecube/component_faq.jsp Official Information].) * [[DK Bongo|Bongos]] (known in Japan as ''tarukonga'')for use with the music games [[Donkey Konga]], [[Donkey Konga 2]] and [[Donkey Konga 3]], and the Donkey Kong platform title ''[[Donkey Kong Jungle Beat]]''. * [[Gamecube Microphone|Microphone]], which plugs into memory card slot, for use with [[Mario Party 6]], [[Mario Party 7]] and [[Yoot Saito's Odama]]. * [[Mario Dance Pad]], for use with a Nintendo version of [[Dance Dance Revolution]], called [[Dance Dance Revolution with Mario]]. ==Connectivity== The GameCube system also has the unique capability to connect to Nintendo's portable system [[Game Boy Advance]] or its [[Game Boy Advance SP|SP]] variant. Such a connection between the two systems allows the transfer of game data. Examples of this functionality include the use of the Game Boy Advance as a controller for the game played. Subsequent information related to game play may be displayed on the Game Boy Advance's color screen for added convenience or to avoid the cluttering of the display on the television screen. This functionality has also been used to unlock "secrets" such as new levels or characters when two games, a Game Boy Advance game and its GameCube equivalent, are connected together. Up to four Game Boy Advance systems can be connected to the GameCube through the GameCube's four controller ports for multiplayer play. A special Nintendo GameCube to Game Boy Advance connection cable is required for each Game Boy Advance system that is to be connected to the GameCube. A fair variety of GameCube games implement this innovative functionality, while Nintendo encourages its continued use. Games that supported the GameCube - Game Boy Advance Connectivity ('''Important games are bolded'''): {|- | valign=top| * ''[[All-Star Baseball 2004]]'' * ''[[Amazing Island]]'' * ''[[Animal Crossing]]'' * ''[[Batman: Rise of Sin Tzu]]'' * ''[[Billy Hatcher and The Giant Egg]]'' * ''[[Crash Bandicoot: The Huge Adventure]]'' * ''[[Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex]]'' * ''[[Crash Nitro Kart]]'' * ''[[Disney Sports Basketball]]'' * ''[[Disney Sports Soccer]]'' * ''[[Disney Sports: Snowboarding]]'' * ''[[Disney's Magical Quest Starring Mickey and Minnie]]'' | valign=top| * ''[[Final Fantasy: Crystal Chronicles]]'' * ''[[Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance]]'' * ''[[Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets]]'' * ''[[Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban]]'' * ''[[Harry Potter: Quidditch World Cup]]'' * ''[[Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town]]'' * ''[[Harvest Moon: More Friends of Mineral Town]]'' * ''[[Hot Wheels: Velocity X]]'' * ''[[James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing]]'' * ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures]]'' * ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker]]'' * ''[[The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King]]'' | valign=top| * ''[[Madden NFL 2004]]'' * ''[[Medabots Infinity]]'' * ''[[Medal of Honor: Infiltrator]]'' * ''[[Medal of Honor: Rising Sun]]'' * ''[[Metroid Prime]]'' * ''[[Pac-Man Vs.]]'' * ''[[Phantasy Star Online: Episode I & II]]'' * ''[[Phantasy Star Online: Episode I & II Plus]]'' * ''[[Pokemon Box Ruby and Sapphire]]'' * ''[[Pokemon Colosseum]]'' * ''[[Pokemon XD: Gale of Darkness]]'' * ''[[Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time]]'' | valign=top| * ''[[Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc]]'' * ''[[The Sims: Bustin' Out]]'' * ''[[Sonic Advance]]'' * ''[[Sonic Adventure 2 Battle]]'' * ''[[Sonic Adventure DX: Director's Cut]]'' * ''[[SSX 3]]'' * ''[[Star Wars: Rogue Squadron III: Rebel Strike]]'' * ''[[Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2004]]'' * ''[[Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell]]'' * ''[[URBZ, The: Sims in the City]]'' * ''[[Wario World]]'' * ''[[WarioWare Inc.: Mega Party Games]]'' |} ==Price history== '''''North America''''' * US$199 ([[November 18]], [[2001 in video gaming|2001]], Launch Price) * US$99 ([[2004 in video gaming|2004]]) * CAD$299 ([[November 18]], [[2001 in video gaming|2001]], Launch Price) * CAD$129 ([[2004 in video gaming|2004]]) == Gallery == <gallery> Silver GCN model.jpg|The silver GameCube model </gallery> ==See also== * [[List of GameCube video games]] * [[Game Boy Advance]] ==External links== * [http://www.nintendo.com Official Nintendo website] {{Nintendo Hardware}} {{Sixth-Generation Consoles}}
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