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Nintendo
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Nintendo

Nintendo (任天堂) (Ninten is translated roughly as "leave luck to heaven" or "in heaven's hands," do is a common suffix for names of shops or laboratories.) was originally founded in 1889 by Fusajiro Yamauchi to produce handmade hanafuda (Japanese playing cards). Over the years, it changed to a video game company and became one of the most powerful companies in the video game industry. Nintendo of Japan, the main branch of the company, is based in Kyoto, Kyoto prefecture, Japan. Nintendo of America, its North American division, is based in Redmond, Washington and Nintendo of Europe, the European division, is based in Großostheim, Germany.

Nintendo is the longest running company in the history of the video game console market. They have been in the U.S. market since 1985 and have manufactured four TV consoles; the Famicom/NES, the Super Famicom/Super NES, N64, the current GameCube, and five versions of their popular handheld console, the GameBoy.

Table of contents
1 History
2 Rise of TV Consoles
3 Early 1990s
4 1995
5 Current era
6 Portable Game Boy
7 Happenings
8 The Hardware
9 The Software and Franchises
10 Franchises that were established on Nintendo systems
11 Arcade games released by Nintendo
12 Policies
13 See also

History

In 1950, Hiroshi Yamauchi, great-great-grandson of Fusajiro and future president of Nintendo, made a deal with Disney to produce playing cards featuring Disney characters, when Nintendo came to make western-style playing cards as well as hanafuda at that period. Even from its early history it was clear that Nintendo was focused on making entertainment for children. These cards sold millions of packs, and made Nintendo enough money to move into other ventures, particularly toys.

By the late 1970s, Nintendo had begun to lose market share to electronic game manufacturers such as Bandai, and they responded with the Game & Watch; series (small single-screen LCD games) which were created by the late visionary Gunpei Yokoi, as well as a series of arcade games. In 1980, Nintendo of America (NOA) was established by Yamauchi's son-in-law, Minoru Arakawa.

Rise of TV Consoles

Nintendo introduced the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in the United States in 1985 after a successful launch of the Famicom in Japan. The NES is often considered to be the "savior" of the video game industry. Nintendo debuted Super Mario Bros, and later hits such as Metroid, and The Legend of Zelda, helping to boost a market which seriously diminished in the early 1980s (often called "Video game crash of 1983" or "The Great Video Game Crash of the 80's").

By the end of the 1980's the courts found Nintendo guilty of anti-trust activities because it had abused its relationship with 3rd party developers and created a monopoly in the gaming industry by forcing developers not to make games for any other platforms.

Early 1990s

Nintendo released the Super Famicom in November 1990 in Japan to fight against the Sega Megadrive and the PC Engine.

In September 1991, Nintendo released the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in North America, to compete with the Sega Genesis. This became an intense competition for the 16-bit era.

In 1992, the SNES was released in Europe as the rival to the Sega Megadrive.

In Japan, the Super Famicom easily took control of the gaming market.

Despite a slow start, the SNES in North America eventually overtook the Sega Genesis, thanks to franchise titles such as Super Mario World, , Street Fighter 2, and the Final Fantasy series. Nintendo of America's stringent blood and violence policies was later eased up on in the mid '90's. Nintendo initially contracted with Sony to develop an addon CD-ROM drive to the SNES, but after Sony announced a standalone version of the drive, Nintendo terminated the contract and went with Phillips. Either way, nothing happened of the addon drive in regard to the SNES, but Sony took the time and research and began to spin it off into a standalone product, the PlayStation. Nintendo announced their alliance with Phillips at the same conference that Sony announced their CD-ROM drive.

The system did not do as well as the Megadrive in Europe. This isn't terribly surprising, as Europe has historically been Nintendo's weakest market. During the NES era, Nintendo of Europe found itself in the odd position of actually producing several titles for the Sega Master System. However, today Nintendo has formed a partnership with Sega, and the monopoly has ended.

1995

In 1995, Nintendo found themselves in a similar competitive situation. Competitor Sega introduced their 32-bit Saturn, while newcomer Sony introduced the 32-bit PlayStation. Sony's fierce marketing campaigns ensued, and it started to cut into Nintendo and Sega's market share. In September 1996, Nintendo introduced the Nintendo 64 (N64). Nintendo had made a shocking move for their choice of the out-dated Cartridge medium, especially considering their competition's choice of emerging CD-ROM storage mediums. The first 3D Mario game was introduced as Super Mario 64, which was said to have set the measurement standards of 3D video games to this day. The N64 managed to secure a solid #2 spot under the #1 Sony PlayStation.

Current era

By 2001 the next generation consoles were being released. Sega had introduced the Dreamcast in 1999, Sony answered with the PlayStation 2, Microsoft joined the fray with the Xbox, and in November of 2001, Nintendo released the GameCube. Nintendo has continued with their popular high quality franchise titles, such as, Mario, , Star Fox, Metroid, Super Smash Brothers, and a new series called Pikmin. As of March 2004, total U.S. sales of the GameCube has surpassed 7 million units, which put it in second place in total worldwide sales ahead of the Xbox. This was made evident when the price of the GameCube was dropped to $99.99 in September 2003. Nintendo continues to hold a strong market in all worldwide regions.

Portable Game Boy

Introduced in 1989, and continuing strong today, were Nintendo's portable Game Boy systems. With several evolutions, including Pocket, Color, Advance, and Advance SP versions, the Game Boy is the single most successful, and oldest video game platform still in production. The Game Boy has been known for putting over a dozen other portable systems out of business (Including Nintendo's other attempts such as the Virtual Boy). Due to low battery consumption, durability, and a library of over a thousand games, the Game Boy has been on the top of the portable game food chain since its inception.

Slowing sales of the Game Boy were assisted by the introduction of the Pokémon game, which started a phenomenon of top selling video games, movies, merchandise, and TV shows. The Pokémon phenomena helped and continue to help rocket Game Boy sales all around the world.

In June 2004, Nintendo re-released eight separate NES games to the GameBoy Advance called the Classic NES Series. The current titles are:

Happenings

In 2002, Hiroshi Yamauchi stepped down as the president of Nintendo and named Satoru Iwata his successor.

In 2003, Wizards of the Coast, a subsidiary of Hasbro, sued Nintendo, Pokémon U.S.A, and various other Nintendo affiliates over breach of contract and various of other charges relating to the Pokémon trading card game.

In early 2004 Nintendo announced a new portable game console, called Nintendo DS. It's expected worldwide release will be in late 2004. The Nintendo DS is going to be marketed separately from their Game Boy Advance and GameCube consoles, it will have two three inch backlit TFT LCD screens, separate processors and up to 1 Gigabit (128 MB) of memory. The Nintendo DS will not be compatible with the GameCube, but has been reported that it will play Game Boy Advance cartridges. It was unveiled at the E3 gaming expo in May 2004.

The Hardware

  • Game & Watch;
  • Nintendo Family Computer (Famicom for short) Japanese console.
    • Famicom Disk System Japan only) - A large number of stores in Japan had "Disk Writers" with games stored in them that could be downloaded to a non-standard floppy disk for ¥2,000. Very popular in Japan, killed due to advancing technology that rendered the disks obsolete, and later, rampant piracy of said disks.
  • Nintendo Entertainment System (NES for short) North American and European console version of the Famicom. It was responsible for reviving the North American video game industry.
  • Game Boy - Portable black and white handheld system. The best-selling videogame system of all time.
  • Super Famicom 16-bit Japanese console.
  • Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES or Super NES for short) North American and European console version of the Super Famicom.
  • Super Game Boy - Adapter for playing Game Boy games on the Super NES.
  • Virtual Boy - The Virtual Boy used a red monochrome 3D virtual reality like system. Fewer than two dozen games were released for it in the United States.
  • Game Boy Color- A version of the Game Boy with a simple colored screen.
  • Nintendo 64 - Originally the Ultra 64, this system saw Nintendo fully embrace 3D game worlds. It was also the last home console that was cartridge-based.
    • 64DD - Only released in Japan, this add-on system's games are on rewriteable disks. Games released include a paint and 3D construction package, F-Zero X Expansion Kit, for creating new F-Zero X tracks and a few others. An utter commercial failure, many speculated that Nintendo released it only to save face after promoting it pre-emptively for years.
  • Game Boy Advance - The new, more advanced version of the Game Boy.
  • Nintendo GameCube - Nintendo's next-generation mini disk system; uses a proprietary DVD medium.
  • Triforce - An arcade system based on GameCube hardware, developed in partnership with Sega and Namco.
  • Game Boy Advance SP - a fold-up version of the Game Boy Advance with a frontlit screen. The SP stands for Special Project.
  • Game Boy Player - An adapter for playing Game Boy games on the GameCube.
  • Nintendo DS - Forthcoming dual-screen portable game console, possibly to be released in 2004.
  • GameCube 2 (N5) - (tentative) - Nintendo plans to release its next video game console in late 2005.

Nintendo's chief designer, and video game producer, is Shigeru Miyamoto. Mr. Miyamoto is largely known for creating Nintendo's most popular games. Miyamoto is considered by many to be the most talented video game developer in the industry. He is known for several franchise titles, such as Donkey Kong, Mario, Zelda, F-zero, Mario Kart, Starfox, and Pikmin.

Nintendo Power is a monthly news and strategy magazine from Nintendo. The first issue published was July/August of 1988 spotlighting the NES game Super Mario Bros. 2. They are still being published today with over 180 issues.

The Software and Franchises

Franchises that were established on Nintendo systems

In addition to its notable first party franchises, Nintendo consoles were where a number of popular console franchises began.

Franchises established on the NES

Franchises established on the Gameboy

Franchises established on the SNES

Franchises established on the N64

Franchises established on the GameCube

Arcade games released by Nintendo

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Nintendo Database
A huge Nintendo-fest of characters young and old
http://www.planetnintendo.com/nindb/

Nintendo of America, Inc.
The Official Nintendo web page with codes, previews, contests, and interaction.
http://www.nintendo.com/

Nintendoodle
News, reviews, previews, cheats, articles, foruums, and downloads.
http://www.nintendoodle.com/

Nintendo Heaven
News, images, reviews, and guides.
http://www.geocities.com/bsmeyer_2001/index.html

Nintendo Fact
News, reviews, and codes.
http://www.nintendofact.com/

KidsCom GamePad
Message board and tip of the week.
http://www.kidscom.com/orakc/gamepad/nintendo/index.shtml

Nintendo Online
Official homepage from Nintendo of Europe
http://www.nintendo.de/

Nintendo News
News, reviews, cheats, and forum.
http://gaming_news_2001.tripod.com/

Unlicensed World of Nintendo
Features unlicensed games and accessories for various Nintendo systems.
http://www.geocities.com/TimesSquare/Battlefield/2374/index.html

NGN: Next Generation Nintendo
Previews, reviews, editorials and media.
http://www.angelfire.com/extreme2/NGN

World of Nintendo
Instruction manuals, release dates, chat, reviews, music, and information.
http://www.world-of-nintendo.com/

The Spoon
News and reviews.
http://www.the-spoon.co.uk/

Nintendo Research Online
Information on the Nintendo systems and their games.
http://www.geocities.com/nintendoresearch

Nintendo Dream
Resource for Nintedo 64, GameCube, Gameboy, and Gameboy Advance.
http://ndream.vgamin.com

Nintendo GameCube EarthBound
Features reviews, and previews for Nintendo systems.
http://www.ngeb.net/

Miyamoto Shrine
Dedicated to Shigeru Miyamoto creator of Super Mario Bros., Legend of Zelda and Donkey Kong. A Mini-biography is featured along with reviews and previews for all systems.
http://www.miyamotoshrine.com

Nintendophiles
Features, previews, reviews, and news.
http://www.n-philes.com/

Electronic Games
Contains reviews, screen shots, and codes.
http://www.watershedonline.ca/community/personal/Joel/Electronic-Games.shtml

Nintendo Fire
Includes cheats, reviews, previews, screen shots, and release dates.
http://www.nintendofire.com

Classic Gaming Entertainment
Provides information, reviews, and downloads for classic Nintendo games.
http://cge.ffmyths.com

Nintendo Gamenet
Offers news, reviews, previews, codes and editorials.
http://www.nintendogamenet.com

Tendo City
Contains news, reviews and forums.
http://www.tcforums.com/

Shiggsy's Place
Dedicated to gather information on all development units (kits) available.
http://shiggsy.gbadev.org/

Nintendo Now
Focuses on news, cheats, multimedia and interactive information.
http://www.nintendonow.com/

Ninty.Net
Offers news, cheats, reviews, forums and downloads for GameBoy Advance and GameCube.
http://ninty.net/

The Pipe House
Contains a MIDI and MP3 archive, comics, cheats, downloads, and a forum.
http://www.pipehouse.net/

N-Insanity
Offers GameCube and GBA cheats, reviews, previews, screenshots, editorials, forums and a chatroom.
http://n-insanity.com/

NintendoNation
A tribute to Nintendo's best love franchises including Mario, Zelda and Starfox.
http://www.freewebs.com/nintendonation

Flying Omelette's Game Kitchen
Reviews and information on NES and Super NES games.
http://www.flyingomelette.com/

Nintendo Vortex
News, reviews, message boards, chat, and cheats for anything Nintendo related.
http://www.nintendo-vortex.com

The Nintendo Index
The Nintendo Index looks at games old and new to answer one question: Is it a classic? We analyze games and judge weather they have (or will) stand the text of time.
http://ndex.simgames.net

N-Run -- Slow but steady Nintendo gaming news
Nintendo gaming news. A simple, plain, haphazardly updated Nintendo news site. What we lack in decent page design, we make up for with lackluster articles and late reports.
http://nrun.potchgult.com

Nintendo Midi Music
MIDI files of several pieces of Nintendo music.
http://home.swipnet.se/~w-22134/nmm/

N-Sider.com
Database of Nintendo employees, companies, games and consoles. Also updates with features, news and contests.
http://www.n-sider.com

Nintendo News 101
Nintendo news.
http://www.freewebs.com/nintendonews101

NinRPG
A database featuring Nintendo RPG games, and news regarding Nintendo-based RPGs.
http://members.lycos.co.uk/ffnetwork

Nintastic
Nintendo reviews and coverage.
http://www.nintastic.com

Nintendo GN
Nintendo news, reviews, and forums.
http://www.nintendogn.com

Ninty Web
Contains news, previews, and previews.
http://www.nintyweb.com

The Nth Dimension
Reviews, previews, cheats, chat, forums, images, polls, desktop themes, wallpapers, music, fan-artwork, and fan-fiction.
http://www.nth-d.com/

N-News
News, cheats, and game information.
http://internettrash.com/users/nintendo/index.html

Ninten.com
Talk about the Gamecube, N64 and other Nintendo consoles, games and issues here.
http://www.ninten.com/

Nintendo
News, reviews, previews, and codes.
http://www.geocities.com/youandwhosearmy/nintendo.html

Nintendo All-Stars Homeworld
Reviews, previews, game ideas, and comics.
http://members.tripod.com/Toadmon/grid1.html

Gamewarriors
Contains history, Game Genie codes, and accessories.
http://www.angelfire.com/ne/Gamewarriors/Gamewarriors.html

Nintendo Land
Contains information, reviews, technical specifications, trivia, and profiles.
http://www.nintendoland.com/

Nintendo Gaming
Reviews, news, walkthroughs, codes, message board, and specifications.
http://www.ngaming.com/

NintendoCube
Contains previews, reviews, and downloads.
http://cube.smedia.co.uk

CubeAdvance
Offers previews, reviews, and cheats.
http://www.cubeadvance.co.uk/

On The Wall Nintendo
Contains cheats, reviews, and previews.
http://www.geocities.com/nintendogamezone



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