REDMOND, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--      Nintendo wants to inspire kids across North America to discover their       inner superheroes with some help from the iconic Kirby™ video       game character. Starting today, kids who visit http://kirby.nintendo.com/superability       will be invited to create drawings and descriptions of their dream Super       Abilities, taking inspiration from Kirby’s Super Abilities in the new Kirby’s       Return to Dream Land™ game for the Wii™       system. Their imaginative creations can be submitted to Nintendo and may       be featured as part of a project to aid Starlight Children’s Foundation™.    
      Launching exclusively for the Wii console on Oct. 24, Kirby’s Return       to Dream Land features five new Super Abilities that are activated       when the heroic Kirby inhales special enemy characters. For example, the       Flare Beam Super Ability allows Kirby to deploy a ball of energy that       can wipe out an entire screen’s worth of foes. Visitors to the site at http://kirby.nintendo.com/superability       can download a Kirby coloring sheet and come up with their own Super       Ability that they would use to help others. For added inspiration, kids       can visit The Stacks at http://scholastic.com/stacks       and take a “What’s Your Super Ability?” quiz. Participants can answer       questions to determine which of the Super Abilities featured in Kirby’s       Return to Dream Land would suit them best.    
      Kids’ completed Super Ability coloring sheets can be submitted via mail,       email or fax. Nintendo and Scholastic will post select submissions to a       virtual gallery on the Nintendo site, and some submissions will be       featured at a special Oct. 27 unveiling at Miller Children’s Hospital       Long Beach in Long Beach, Calif., to celebrate Nintendo’s sponsorship of       an interactive Starlight Fun Center™ mobile entertainment       unit. Patients at the hospital will also be invited to use coloring       sheets to create their own Super Abilities. Both Nintendo and Scholastic       are dedicated to raising awareness about Starlight by encouraging       children to help others.    
      Since 1992, Nintendo and Starlight have placed more than 7,000 Fun       Centers in hospitals across North America. The ease with which Fun       Centers roll right up to the side of young patients’ beds or anywhere in       a hospital setting makes them the perfect companion for children who are       nervously awaiting surgery, sitting restlessly during a long treatment       or feeling lonely in their hospital room. The entertainment units       include a flat-screen TV, a DVD player, a Wii system and a selection of       fun video games.
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