25 Addicting Facts About Nintendo Every Gamer Should Know
Nathan Johnson
Published
05/18/2016
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Nintendo is the world’s largest video game company by revenue
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1.
When Nintendo was founded in 1889 one of its original and most popular products were playing cards. For this reason, they still sell them today in limited editions. -
2.
Nintendo 64 was a groundbreaking console, being the first to feature 3D graphics. It was also the last major console to use cartridges. -
3.
It has previously been reported that the Game Boy was the main influence and inspiration for the BMO gadget in Cartoon Network’s Adventure Time series. -
4.
The Game Boy console was the second handheld system released by Nintendo. The Game & Watch was released in 1980 but didn’t have any outstanding success. -
5.
Shigeru Miyamoto, legendary videogame designer (Super Mario Bros., The Legend of Zelda, Donkey Kong), has had games on every Nintendo console; his earliest work appeared in arcade games in the late seventies. Time has called him the “Steven Spielberg of video games.” -
6.
Very few people, however, are aware that Miyamoto originally wanted to be a cartoonist but abandoned manga comics because he felt that he wasn’t good enough to compete with some of the best illustrators in the field. -
7.
Nintendo attempted to become LEGO’s greatest competition at some point by building its own brick system called N&B Blocks. Judging from the fact that not many people (if any at all) know or remember anything about this should tell you about its lack of commercial success. -
8.
As of March 2016, all models of Nintendo DS combined have sold nearly 160 million units worldwide. This makes the DS the biggest-selling handheld console to date. -
9.
The company’s first venture into video games came when it secured the rights to distribute the Magnavox Odyssey console in Japan in 1974. -
10.
Nintendo’s global revenue has surpassed an astonishing $5.5 billion according to Forbes. -
11.
Miyamoto’s first NES game never came to the United States because of its demonic characters. Devil World was pretty much a Pac-Man clone and was banned because the protagonist killed demons with the power of the crucifix and the Bible. -
12.
Nintendogs were inspired by a Shetland sheepdog named Pikku. For the record, Pikku belonged to who else? Shigeru Miyamoto, Nintendo’s famous game designer. -
13.
Nintendo had the same president for more than fifty-five years, longer than any other videogame company in history. The late Hiroshi Yamauchi was president and chairman of Nintendo from 1949 until 2005, during which time he became one of the richest men in Japan with a net worth of $2.7 billion. -
14.
The most popular symbol of video gaming that pretty much every major videogame company uses nowadays, the “cross” D-pad, was created in 1982 for Nintendo’s Donkey Kong. -
15.
During the early sixties one of Nintendo’s many ambitious attempts to make it big included a “Love Hotel,” where adults could rent rooms by the hour and you know . . . have some fun before gaming was cool. -
16.
Also during the same decade, Nintendo tried to import the classic Western game Twister to Japan but the whole project failed miserably. -
17.
In 2007 a radio station in Sacramento launched a contest with the catchy title “Hold Your Pee for a Wii.” The contest required listeners to drink as much water as possible without using the bathroom. The whole thing ended tragically when twenty-eight-year-old Jennifer Strange died of water intoxication. -
18.
Nintendo almost released an accessory and game that would have allowed players to create their own knitting patterns. However, during market research, all seven of the beta test volunteers died of old age and the project was eventually canceled. -
19.
The Seattle Mariners are owned by Nintendo of America, represented by CEO Howard Lincoln. Yep, Nintendo is the only videogame company that owns an MLB team. -
20.
Donkey Kong, Mario, and Princess Peach were inspired by characters from the cartoon Popeye. Nintendo created them after they failed to obtain a license to make a Popeye video game. -
21.
The chronology of the Legend of Zelda series was the subject of debate among fans until an official timeline was released on December 21, 2011, in the collector’s book Hyrule Historia. Apparently, only one Legend of Zelda game is a chronological sequel to the original. According to Nintendo’s official timeline, all other subsequent games in the franchise occur hundreds or thousands of years in the past with some of them even coexisting in a parallel universe. -
22.
A lawyer named John Kirby calls his sailboat Donkey Kong and Nintendo can’t sue him for this. See, Kirby won a case for Nintendo in 1984, and to show him its appreciation the company bought him a boat along with the “exclusive worldwide right to use the name for sailboats.” -
23.
In 1993, Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Serebrov spent an astonishing 196 days in the Russian space station, managing to orbit our beautiful planet over three thousand times. To have something to do during his downtime he took a Game Boy with him and played Tetris. This made Nintendo the first videogame company to have a product to leave Earth’s atmosphere. -
24.
Mario, arguably the most famous mustachioed plumber in videogame history, was named after Nintendo’s warehouse landlord and Seattle real estate developer Mario Segale. -
25.
The word “Nintendo” is composed of three kanji (Chinese letters used in the Japanese system of writing) characters: nin, ten, and do. So, if you translate “Nintendo” you will find it means something like “leave luck to heaven.”
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