海外サイトにて任天堂の知られざる10の秘密がまとめられていましたので紹介します。
1. 任天堂は今年で121周年
2.任天堂はラブホテルを経営していたことがある
3.任天堂はかつてレゴみたいなブロックを作ってたことがある
4.任天堂はドンキーコングはキングコングの著作権侵害として訴えられたが勝利した。そのとドンキーコングはひとりの男の手中に握られていた
5.任天堂はマイクロソフトをレドモンドに移転させた
6.十字キーを開発したのは任天堂の横井軍平氏
7.80年代ニンテンドーアメリカのゲームは全て年齢規制の対象になった(ゼルダでさえ)
8.任天堂はシアトル・マリナーズを保有している
9.2000年の始めに任天堂は携帯電話を開発していた
10.ninntendogsは宮本茂氏の飼っているシェパードの「ピック」にヒントを得た
如何だったでしょうか。日本人でも意外と知らない知識もありました。
Despite a few flops along the way, Nintendo has been one of the most successful players in the video game industry since the early 1980s.
But how much do you know about Nintendo? Did you know it’s over 100
years old? Do you know which American sports team it owns? Did you know
LEGO once took legal action against it?
Take a look through the gallery for some fun facts you might not know
about the Japanese gaming giant. Let us know in the comments which
factoids scored a 1-Up with you.
1. Nintendo is 121 Years Old
Nintendo makes its gaming rivals look like cheeky young
upstarts. It was founded by Fusajiro Yamauchi on Sept. 23, 1889 as a
company that made Japanese playing cards. While Sony's history dates
back to 1946, Microsoft's 1975 inception makes it the baby of the trio.
Image courtesy of Olly Moss
2. Nintendo Used to Run a "Love Hotel"
One of many business ideas explored by early Nintendo
was a "love hotel." These establishments are popular in Japan and offer
couples rooms by the hour. Nintendo invested in a love hotel in the
swinging '60s, although "the location and name of Nintendo’s hotel seems lost to the pages of time..." Lost -- or buried.
Image courtesy of Dave Walker
3. Nintendo Once Made LEGO-like Bricks
Another of its many business schemes: Nintendo built a
brick system called "N&B Blocks." It seems LEGO wasn't too pleased,
but Nintendo wangled its way out of legal difficulty due to the fact
that some of its blocks were rounded.
The N&B Blocks were eventually nixed, but back in the 1990s a GameBoy game made reference to them.
Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins boasted an entire stage made out of N&B Blocks.
Image courtesy of BeforeMario
4. Only One Man Has the Right to Call His Sailboat "Donkey Kong"
Skip forward a few decades and Nintendo is facing more legal action. This time it's Universal Studios, which thinks
Donkey Kong infringes on the
King Kong trademark.
Because Nintendo's first bit had just hit in the States, it was a
crucial legal battle to win. Nintendo pulled out the big guns with
attorney John Kirby, who successfully argued that the
King Kong plot and characters were in the public domain.
To thank Kirby, Nintendo bought him a sailboat and granted him "exclusive worldwide rights to use the name for sailboats."
Image courtesy of Wikipedia
5. Nintendo Beats Microsoft to Redmond
Redmond, Washington is most famous as the headquarters of Microsoft, but Nintendo settled in the Seattle suburb
before the software giant.
With the profits from
Donkey Kong Nintendo bought land in Redmond in 1982. Microsoft didn't relocate from Bellevue, Washington until 1986.
Image courtesy of Benjamin Benschneider
6. Nintendo Invented the Cross-Shaped D-Pad
The cross-shaped D-pad was invented by GameBoy creator
and long-time Nintendo employee Gunpei Yokoi. It was initially designed
for the handheld version of
Donkey Kong, but Nintendo soon
realized it could be used with console controllers, too. The D-pad
featured on the NES "+Control Pad", and the rest is history.
Image courtesy of TenThirtyNine
7. Nintendo of America Censored Everything in the Eighties
In the '80s and through to the early Nineties, Nintendo
of America had some seriously strict game guidelines laid out in an
official policy. While much of the policy worked to block truly
offensive content, the level of censorship was taken to the extreme.
Examples
of over-zealous changes made to games include a classic nude statue
being clothed, a red cross being removed from a hospital frontage, bars
being changed to cafes and, in one bizarre example, a criminal gang
smuggling a shipment of bananas, rather than drugs.
Image courtesy of jjmccullough
8. Nintendo Owns the Seattle Mariners
Back in 1992 Nintendo became the majority owner of major
league baseball team the Seattle Mariners. After the purchase, the
team's mascot remained the Mariner Moose,, although a Mario mascot did
make an appearance when the company was promoting
Mario Super Sluggers.
9. Nintendo Developed a Phone in the Early 2000s
As well as patenting an "electronic apparatus having game and telephone functions," Nintendo actively developed a mobile phone. Last year PocketGamer revealed the surprising news.
"A development source, who preferred to remain anonymous, has
revealed that there was a skunkworks R&D project run by Nokia and
Nintendo in the early 2000s - about the same time Nokia was working on
its original N-Gage phone."
"The R&D efforts, which were located at Nintendo's Japanese HQ,
were successful enough that the concept of a Nintendo phone was taken to
the company's board of directors for approval. It was rejected."
10. Nintendogs Was Inspired By a Shetland Sheepdog Called Pikku
Nintendogs could have just as easily been Nintencats
were it not for a Shetland sheepdog called Pikku. This is because Pikku
belonged to Shigeru Miyamoto, Nintendo's famous game designer.
As well as the dog-themed game, Miyamoto's impressive resume includes
creating some of the world's most famous video game franchises, such as
Mario,
Donkey Kong and
The Legend of Zelda.
MTV reports,
"Miyamoto acknowledged that his team had considered making the game
about other animals. 'The reason it ended up being a dog game is because
about four years ago me and my family actually got our first dog,' he
said. The family's tri-color Shetland Sheepdog named Pikku sealed it."
http://mashable.com/2011/10/02/nintendo-facts/