Mii: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Mii PlayNintendo.png|thumb]]
[[File:Mii PlayNintendo.png|thumb]]
'''Miis''' are customizable avatars featured in a variety of [[Nintendo]] games. Debuting with the release of the [[Wii]], Miis have been present in every Nintendo platform since.
'''Miis''' are customizable avatars featured in a variety of [[Nintendo]] games. Debuting with the release of the [[Wii]], Miis have been present in every Nintendo platform since.
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{{main|Tomodachi Collection}}
{{main|Tomodachi Collection}}


''Tomodachi Collection'' allows players to create Miis that can live on an island. The Mii creator is very similar to the one in ''Personal Trainer: Walking'', but now options for voice and personality are added.[[File:Mii Pants Guide.png|thumb]]
''Tomodachi Collection'' allows players to create Miis that can live on an island. The Mii creator is very similar to the one in ''Personal Trainer: Walking'', but now options for voice and personality are added.
 
=== Nintendo 3DS ===
=== Nintendo 3DS ===
The Nintendo 3DS had the first Mii creator on handheld devices, accessed through the app Mii Maker. Mii Maker is essentially a smaller version of the Mii Channel: Miis stand on a similarly tiled void and can walk around, but they do not interact with each other. Additionally, to accommodate for a smaller screen, only up to 10 Miis can be shown at a time (the bottom screen has arrows to flip between different slides of Miis).
[[File:Mii Pants Guide.png|thumb|213x213px]]The Nintendo 3DS had the first Mii creator on handheld devices, accessed through the app Mii Maker. Mii Maker is essentially a smaller version of the Mii Channel: Miis stand on a similarly tiled void and can walk around, but they do not interact with each other. Additionally, to accommodate for a smaller screen, only up to 10 Miis can be shown at a time (the bottom screen has arrows to flip between different slides of Miis).


Mii Maker adds several facial features from the Mii Channel. Additionally, users can use the 3DS camera to automatically make Miis based on one's image.
Mii Maker adds several facial features from the Mii Channel. Additionally, users can use the 3DS camera to automatically make Miis based on one's image.

Revision as of 02:44, 5 August 2021

Miis are customizable avatars featured in a variety of Nintendo games. Debuting with the release of the Wii, Miis have been present in every Nintendo platform since.

History

The idea of implementing character creation in a Nintendo console started with game director Shigeru Miyamoto, who insisted for years that a game be released involving the ability to recreate existing people.[1]At one point, Nintendo SPD was coincidentally working on a similar game involving faces.[1] So, the teams involved in these two separate projects were put together to develop what would eventually become known as the Mii Channel.[1]

Mii Creation and Storage

In every Nintendo platform since the Wii, the means of creating, storing, and sharing Miis is slightly different.

Wii

The first Mii maker was the Mii Channel. Miis stored on the Wii console walk around a white, tiled void known as the Mii Plaza, and sometimes interact with each other. When the player selects the Create Mii button, they are taken to another screen where they can being choosing the gender and appearance of their new Mii.

Users have an option to "favorite" Miis, giving them dark red pants.

Nintendo DS

While the Nintendo DS does not have a built-in Mii creator, two games on it did have this function

Personal Trainer: Walking

Main article: Personal Trainer: Walking

Personal Trainer: Walking allowed users to either create Miis or import them from their Wii. These Miis are used to represent the player in the walking exercises featured in the game. The Mii creator is set in an yellowish area this time, with the customization features selected on the bottom screen.

Tomodachi Collection

Main article: Tomodachi Collection


Tomodachi Collection allows players to create Miis that can live on an island. The Mii creator is very similar to the one in Personal Trainer: Walking, but now options for voice and personality are added.

Nintendo 3DS

The Nintendo 3DS had the first Mii creator on handheld devices, accessed through the app Mii Maker. Mii Maker is essentially a smaller version of the Mii Channel: Miis stand on a similarly tiled void and can walk around, but they do not interact with each other. Additionally, to accommodate for a smaller screen, only up to 10 Miis can be shown at a time (the bottom screen has arrows to flip between different slides of Miis).

Mii Maker adds several facial features from the Mii Channel. Additionally, users can use the 3DS camera to automatically make Miis based on one's image.

New version of pants are introduced with the 3DS.

  • Red: can mean the Mii is
    • the user character of the system
    • the user character of someone else's system
    • a favorited Mii
  • Blue: the Mii is received from another system
  • Yellow: the Mii is a character distributed by Nintendo

Tomodachi Life

Main article: Tomodachi Life

Being the sequel to Tomodachi Collection, Tomodachi Life has the same Mii creator with the same music. However, the option to share Miis via QR codes is introduced. Miis could be imported from the Nintendo 3DS itself as well.

Miitopia

Main article: Miitopia


Miitopia's Mii creator had a more simplified version of personalities, but it was the first instance a Mii could have unnaturally colored hair. Miis could be imported from the Nintendo 3DS or from Tomodachi Life save data.

Wii U

Miis are stored in WaraWara Plaza, the home menu of the Wii U.

Nintendo Switch

The Nintendo Switch Mii creator is the first and only Mii creator in a Nintendo console that does not feature a plaza. Instead, Miis can be viewed via a menu that can be located in the System Settings. Up to 100 Miis can be saved. It is also the first creator to not have any music.

The Mii creator is a lot more simplistic than previous installments. The Mii is placed in a light gray, sparkly background. To the left of the screen, the customization features are listed with words and icons this time. When the colors for hairstyle, eyebrows, eyes, mouse, facial hair are selected, there is an option to show 100 more colors, many of which are unnatural for humans.

When choosing a look-alike to start from, the user must select the gender of the Mii first and then 18 seemingly randomly generated Miis will be shown.

Retiring the usage of QR codes for Miis, the Nintendo Switch allows users to send and receive Miis by connecting the console to nearby users. Currently, the only way to share Miis online is through Miitopia's access key system.

Miitopia

Main article: Miitopia

While the Switch version of Miitopia has a creator that is identical to the console's, there are two new features introduced: Makeup and Wigs. Makeup allows the player to add up to 100 shapes to their Mii's face, allowing for even more customization. Wigs replaces the Mii's hair with a wig the player can create by combining bangs, backs, and cowlicks, along with a two different hair colors and accessory colors when applicable.

Replacing QR codes from the 3DS version, the Switch version allows players to share Miis via access codes. Each code is unique for each save file, and by sharing it other players can have access to all the Miis from that file (except for ones made private), along with any wigs and makeup they have on. Players can also import shared Miis from the game into the Nintendo Switch itself, however makeup and wigs will not carry over.

Other Platforms

Miitomo

Main article: Miitomo


In Miitomo, players could create Miis via camera or from scratch. QR codes from the Nintendo 3DS and Tomodachi Life could imported as well, and Miis from My Nintendo could be added too. This time, the Mii was placed in a light blue gradient background. It used a similar personality quiz to Tomodachi Life, albeit a bit more advanced. While the game focused on the player's Mii, additional Miis could be made and stored on the app as well.

File:Mii Studio Eyebrows Position.png
My Nintendo "Mii Studio"

Mii Studio

Mii Studio is the Mii creator for My Nintendo, and the first official browser-based Mii creator. It was made to replace the now defunct Miitomo.[2] Mii Studio is very similar to the Nintendo Switch Mii creator due to fact that users can import their Mii from their Nintendo Network ID and it features no music. No new facial features are added.

Usages

The main usage of Miis is as characters in Nintendo games, either as the main characters, such as in Wii Sports, or as extra customizable characters, like in the Super Smash Bros. series. Sometimes, their faces can be used as masks, like in Animal Crossing: City Folk.

Miis have also been used as ways to identify Nintendo users. For example, My Nintendo accounts use Miis as a form of profile picture. Additionally the Nintendo 3DS requires a Mii to represent the owner of the console. For the Nintendo Switch, users can use pictures of select Nintendo characters and images as profile pictures, but they have the option to create a Mii and select a pose for it.

Trivia

  • The shape of the Miis were based on Kokeshi dolls, traditional Japanese toys with round heads, cylindrical bodies, and no arms or legs.[3]
  • The Play Nintendo page for the Miis lists Mario as their one and only friend.[4]

Gallery

References