There are a handful of handheld games, such as Pokemon and Monster Hunter that would arguably be greatly improved if turned into a portable MMO. Sure, the Vita has Phantasy Star Online 2 but that's yet leave Japan, and that still leaves 3DS owners without their MMO fix.

Project Triniate, a 3DS MMO project that runs in the browser, which is no small task considering the lack of flash support. The game is in its very early stages. The player is confined to a single map decorated with a grassy landscape, river, volcano, a a single goblin. Menu and chat systems are in place, and gameplay currently consists of four directional movement, a run function, and two attacks. One seems to be a short-ranged melee attack while the other is some sort of long-range magical beam. The hit detection is also pretty rudimentary, so it's hard to make attacks connect. To top it off, frequent server errors disrupt gameplay. Project Trinate still has a 3DSPlaza 's Robdeprop is working to change things with, a 3DS MMO project that runs in the browser, which is no small task considering the lack of flash support. The game is in its very early stages. The player is confined to a single map decorated with a grassy landscape, river, volcano, a a single goblin. Menu and chat systems are in place, and gameplay currently consists of four directional movement, a run function, and two attacks. One seems to be a short-ranged melee attack while the other is some sort of long-range magical beam. The hit detection is also pretty rudimentary, so it's hard to make attacks connect. To top it off, frequent server errors disrupt gameplay.still has a long way to go , so it's unclear whether the game's current flaws will be rounded out, or if they're a result of the browser's limitations. Either way, it's interesting to see a developer even attempt such a lofty goal.