Yamauchi Retiring from Nintendo's Board 141
terrisus writes "While he had stepped down as President a few years back, Hiroshi Yamauchi had remained on Nintendo's Board of Directors.
In June, however, Yamauchi will now be retiring from the Board of Directors as well.
He will be foregoing his multi-million dollar retirement package, instead desiring the money be put to work in other places. He will still be a 10% stockholder in the company.
It's sad to see him go."
My Yamauchi retired a while ago (Score:5, Funny)
I believe I speak for all slashdot when I say... (Score:1)
Re:My Yamauchi retired a while ago (Score:2, Funny)
Re:My Yamauchi retired a while ago (Score:1)
Re:My Yamauchi retired a while ago (Score:2)
It is sad (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, exactly what is the functional difference between being on the board and owning 10% of the company anyway?
Re:It is sad (Score:3, Informative)
Not sad... (Score:2)
Re:Not sad... (Score:1)
Re:Not sad... (Score:2)
Re:Not sad... (Score:1)
Re:Not sad... (Score:1)
Re:It is sad (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It is sad (Score:1)
Well, let's see. As a 10% shareholder, you just get 10% voting power on anything that is voted on in proxies. You don't really get much if the shares are common, non-preferred shares. As a director, you get an additional retainer/salary which takes the form of cash, stock, or stock options, and depending on the size of the company can be quite large (anywhere from $25k to $1 million) per
Re:It is sad (Score:2)
The board of directors by law must consist of at least 40% "uninterested parties". Uninterested meaning not stockholders, working for the company, family members of people working for the company, etc.
Which of course means that 60% still CAN be part owner (stockholders).
Of course, this is USA SEC law. I don't know Japan's laws, but I would expect that they are similar.
I don't know the makeup of Nintendo's shareholders or their method of voting in board members,
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:2)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:3, Informative)
*Opens mouth and insterts foot* (Score:2)
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oo
>
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Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:2)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:2)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:1)
Re:Bye Yamauchi (Score:1)
Non-greedy executive? (Score:5, Insightful)
"He will be foregoing his multi-million dollar retirement package, instead desiring the money be put to work in other places"
Wow... i'm impressed... when was the last time any other executive ever gave up a multi-million dollar severance package with the advice "it's best spent on something other than me"
what would happen if exec's around the world took this example to heart?
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:2)
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:2)
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:1)
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:1)
umm...I guess the next in charge would be the greedy managers :^P an okay cause I guess
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:2)
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:1)
KFG
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:5, Interesting)
In short: yay for work ethic.
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:1)
That's work ethic? I thought work ethic was when you worked 60 hours a week for 40 hours pay.
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:5, Informative)
Ref:
Title: U.S. CEOs Who Outsource Get Bigger Pay Hike-Survey
Source: Reuters
Author: Andrea Hopkins
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:1)
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:2)
Re:Non-greedy executive? (Score:2)
As a 10% stockholder, chances are he will be reaping financial benefits from this action; it's nothing more than a long-term view.
That's the purpose of giving stock to board members and CEOs and so forth - it gives them a long-term interest, rather than focussing them on the bonusses associated with short-term gains.
Eat the cherries (Score:4, Funny)
A few powerups and he'll be back.
Well there it is then (Score:5, Insightful)
However times changed, audienced moved on. Sony moved forward, Nintendo stood still. A stream of half baked products didn't help them and the once mighty Nintendo who simply ruled the home console market for so long became part of the past. Of course M$ didn't help much either. Difficult to know what to feel, I always got the impression Yamauchi was a bit an ol' stick in the mud and not a particularly nice person.
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Well there it is then (Score:3, Insightful)
The thing that killed the Dreamcast was the Microsoft tactic of "wait! Our console will slice bread, give you sex anytime you want, and make a lifelong companion!" Sony hyped the SN
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
Just one note:
Actually, Microsoft is getting two Mist Walker games. Mist Walker is a new studio run by the guy who invented Final Fantasy.
Mist Walker is also working on a strategy RPG for DS. Frankly, they smell to me like a studio that rents the name of their famous founder... but we'll see how they perform.
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
Though it is possible this will end up being true, this kind of thing is growing common in Japan. A lot of awesome developers are starting very small studios who then collaborate with larger studios to finish the games. In some ways more of a Hollywood model.
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
You see, I think Microsoft and Sony are making the best they can, they both entered a new established market (for them) using their own markets power to enter.
Microsoft played cheap by making a Gaming PC, Sony used what they had from their previous Nintendo short time relation.
But now, we have seen the old generation competitors vanish, remember Neo-Geo, Sega, Turbo
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
Microsoft hadn't even announced the X-Box by the time the Dreamcast's production had ceased. What you're probably (mis)remembering is the often repeated tale about how Sony killed the Dreamcast by announcing the specifications for the PlayStation 2 the day before the Dreamcast release.
Of course, anyone which remembers Nintendo doing that to Se
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
I never said Microsoft had any hand in the death of Segas console.
The software support for the Sega platform went to Sony when the Sony people threw money at developers to get "exclusive" deals. Sega had no capital to pursue that.
I don't believe the sole reason the PS2 won over the Dreamcast was the release
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
Re:Well there it is then (Score:1)
If memory serves, the SNES / Super Famicom out sold the Genesis / Mega Drive around the same time that Ninendo's library of games grew larger than Sega's.
The only figures I could find regarding total world wide sales were here [actsofgord.com].
36 Million Confirmed SNES / Super Famicom sale
Re:Well there it is then (Score:1)
I just think great graphics and gameplay that isn't awful, but does not have to be great will normally sell games to MANY MANY people that and some good marketing.
Re:Well there it is then (Score:1)
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
Re:Well there it is then (Score:1)
Even more recent titles like Metroid Prime blow away anything that the N64 could dream of.
The only N64 ports on the Gamecube are the 2 zelda titles, and Animal Crossing (not release on N64 outside Japan so whats the big deal).
Do you even own/play Nintendo games on this generation?
Re:Well there it is then (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, Nintendo did quit the Playstation-as-SNES-addon deal, but that probably ended up being the best thing that ever happened to Sony. You can hardly say the Big N "made fools out of them."
I agree with your assessment of Yamauchi, though. He seemed very pompous, feeling personally betrayed by Squaresoft's decision to start producing for the PS, when in fact the CD format was the only way they could have done justice to FFVII's story a
Re:Well there it is then (Score:2)
Well, at least he's honorable. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Well, at least he's honorable. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Well, at least he's honorable. (Score:1)
Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:5, Informative)
If it wern't for his foresight , it is likely today the only time you would hear the name nintendo , is if for some reason someone read the manufacturing info on a deck of cards during a game of poker.
http://www.nintendoland.com.nyud.net:8090/home2.h
Thats a nice quick rundown of the history of the company
Re:Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:1)
Re:Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:2)
this is the origional link
http://www.nintendoland.com/home2.htm?history/his
Re:Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:1)
Re:Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, the chi
Re:Domo Arigato ,Mr. YamuchiO! (Score:1)
anyway maybe they need to make more games that are mostly "macho type shoot em ups" where your mission was to kill, shot and destroy everything and everybody. - under 1980 http://www.nintendoland.com/home2.htm?history/hist 2.htm [nintendoland.com]
Game Face (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Game Face (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Game Face (Score:2)
Re:Game Face (Score:2)
It's simple business sense.
Re:Game Face (Score:2)
A Genius (Score:5, Informative)
Just FYI, did you know he's the largest shareholder of the Seattle Mariners?
Re:A Genius (Score:1)
Not worried... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So what if he retires? No change in attitude. (Score:1, Troll)
Re:So what if he retires? No change in attitude. (Score:2)
Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:5, Interesting)
Admittedly, Yamauchi wants Nintendo's first movie(s) to be about some ancient Japanese poems, but that may just be some personal favor he's asking the company to do for him, since his hobby is Go and other old Japanese stuff. After that, Nintendo will probably start adapting their games into movies, as well as making original movie franchises.
Nintendo is a relatively small company that can't hold onto an established market once cash-rich conglomerates like Sony and Microsoft set their sights on it. Nintendo is best at creating and exploding new markets that nobody else believes in. They did it with the NES. They did it with Game Boy. They did it by bringing Pokemon to USA (in 1996, Nintendo Power itself predicted that Pokemon was too foreign to become popular in USA). Soon, Nintendo might do it again. This time with movies.
Well, I mean (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:1)
Re:Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:1)
That's a good point, although 'back in the day' (pre-PSX?) the third parties were also relatively small and the costs of making a game were much smaller.
That made it much easier for the third parties to be flexible and take
Re:Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:1)
Funny point. the margins on a default page in openoffice here is over an inch on all sides, the percentage of page space being dedicated to margins is at least 37% overall.
Re:Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:2)
They did it with the Virtual Boy... whoops!
Re:Yamauchi wants Nintendos to make movies. (Score:1)
A new era for the big N (Score:1)
Iwata will do a fine job, and Reggie will actually be able to kick ass and take names now
1949 eh? (Score:1)
I think stockpiling 7 billion is a good idea (Score:1)
About time. (Score:1)
80's? 90's? (Score:2)
Re:80's? 90's? (Score:1)
Re:About time. (Score:2)
Actually, he's the reason they passed Microsoft up almost a year ago, with the drop of the GameCube to $100. Nintendo has closed the console gap with Sony to 7:1, the lowest it's been in six years.
Nintendo's catching up, fast, not falling behind.
Re:retires with seven billion or so, eh (Score:2, Funny)
Re:retires with seven billion or so, eh (Score:1)
Re:yay (Score:2)
WarioWare Touched cost roughly eight times what Mario Party 3 did to make, despite having roughly half as many games.
All the best intentions in the world don't make up for false statistics. Just because you don't think it takes money to make a game doesn't mean it doesn't actually take money to make a game;