The Check Mii Out Channel, known as the Mii Contest Channel outside of North America, was a Wii Menu for the Nintendo Wii that allowed players to share their digital avatars, called , and enter them into popularity contests.
Nintendo ended support for the Check Mii Out Channel on June 28, 2013, along with four more Wii channels as WiiConnect24, which the channel required, was permanently disconnected.
If a person liked a Mii, it could be imported to his or her Mii Channel plaza. An imported Mii could not be edited, but could have been used in Wii games that use the Mii interface. People could favorite Miis, and the Mii would be given a rank out of five stars, depending on how many people liked the Mii. The artisan was also given a ratings rank of anywhere from one to five stars.
Miis from the Posting Plaza could be imported into Wii Sports Resort which would allow user-created Miis to appear as opponents and spectators in various sports. It would show the initials of the Mii and the player could even check out their entry number. After the discontinuation of the channel, this is no longer possible.
Every month, the Posting Plaza had a "Mii Artisan" ranking section that lasted for the entire month. The first ranking Mii Artisan by the end of the month was declared a "Master Mii Artisan".
Players could judge the Miis which were submitted into the contest to have a potential shot of winning. Players would be shown with a set of 10 Miis which were submitted into the contest, and, if they chose to, the set would be shuffled with a new set of 10 Miis. Players would then choose 3 Miis which they thought fitted the category. Additionally, when the Contest Results got announced, the player would then see how well the Miis that they judged performed, and their Judging Eye status would change.
When the Results of the contests got announced, players could see how well their submitted Mii did and how well the Miis that they selected in the Judge section did. Results were portrayed by showing a diorama of a mountain from a scale of 1st level being the lowest to the Summit being the highest and having the better potential to win the contest. After that, the players would then see the submitted Mii which won the contest, and it would then display the Top 50 Miis of the contest.
Special contests were occasionally held throughout the timeline of the Check Mii Out Channel, with some of them mainly being Nintendo related. These contests would usually have a special icon attached to them, and if the user submitted a Mii to the contest, they were given the chance to take a Souvenir Photo along with their personal Mii if the contest contained one.
| Mario without his cap | Worldwide | November 11, 2007 | November 26, 2007 |
| Luigi without his cap | Worldwide | December 13, 2007 | December 26, 2007 |
| A Mii version of Princess Peach | Worldwide | January 24, 2008 | February 9, 2008 |
| Wario without a hat | Worldwide | 2012 | 2012 |
| Person who might live in Animal Crossing | Worldwide | 2012 | 2012 |
A fan-made service called WiiLink has brought back this service to people who have homebrewed Wiis. It can also be used on Dolphin.
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