NJ5 said:
The glasses are actually a pair of LCD screens (1 pixel per eye). They alternately light up to block the current frame from one of the eyes, in order to let each eye only see even/odd frames. The glasses synchronize with the TV via an infrared signal (emitter needed, if not included in TV) in order to know the frame timing. They're called LCD shutter glasses.
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But the $1 glasses I got from the movies are not these. The polarised option is more likely - which explains why it works on normal TVs.
That would make sense for cinemas too - why they need more expensive projectors. And why TVs need to be upgraded.
I was presuming 3D would work with existing sets - if it doesn't, there is no way Ninty would pursue this option. A DS 3D would be more likely...
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