I went to my Brother in laws this past weekend and he owns a 360 and bought the Wii for his boys ages (4 & 7), with a total of 3 Wii-motes and trying to connect all 3 Wii controllers at once is the biggest pain in the butt i've ever gone through on any console.
With the 360 and PS3 you just a push button on the controller you want connected and your done, with the Wii you have to go into a specific menu push the 1 & 2 buttons just right while holding the remote in front of the sensor bar until it connects and then start your game, and every time we started the game the remotes disconnected.
They all had new batteries, and without exaggeration they had to be reconnected 14 times while only playing 2 games, my older nieces (14) and nephews (17) went through the same problems.
So let me reiterate by saying the Wii is the biggest joke in the gaming industry today, regardless of sales. Time has proven that sales doesn't equal intelligence just people financial straits.
PS3nut
What you should have done (fom the Nintendo web site):
Standard Mode Synchronization
- Press the Power button on the Wii console to turn it on.
- Open the SD Card Slot cover on the front of the Wii console. Remove the battery cover on the back of the Wii Remote you wish to sync up.
- Press and release the SYNC button on the inside of the SD Card compartment on the console. Press and release the SYNC button just below the batteries on the Wii Remote.
- When the Player LED blinking stops, the syncing is complete. The LED that is illuminated indicates the player number (1 through 4)
^^Simple, yes?
What you did was the one time mode sync. You're only supposed to do that when you bring your remote over to a friend's house. It temporarily syncs your remote to another console without removing the original sync to your home console. Since there was no original sync on those remotes you were using, every time you turned off the Wii, the remotes kept on reverting to their original state - not synced to anything.
Maybe your family should learn how to read manuals before blaming your problems on the hardware.
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