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Nintendo Japan Games

Masayuki Uemura, Designer of the Nintendo Entertainment System, Dies At 78 (nytimes.com) 18

"The New York Times has an obituary for Masayuki Uemura, designer of the first Nintendo Entertainment System console," writes Slashdot reader nickovs. Here's an excerpt from the report: Video game consoles had a moment of popularity in the early 1980s, but the market collapsed because of shoddy quality control and uninspiring software that failed to provide the thrills of arcade hits like Pac-Man and Space Invaders. Truckloads of unsold game cartridges ended up in landfills, and retailers decided that home gaming systems had no future. But in 1985, the release of the Nintendo Entertainment System in the United States changed the industry forever. The unassuming gray box with its distinctive controllers became a must-have for an entire generation of children and prompted Nintendo's virtual monopoly over the industry for the better part of a decade as competitors pulled out of the market in response to the company's dominance. "The NES was not the first video game console," adds nickovs. "The quality of the games that became available for the NES, including titles like Super Mario Brothers, made it much more appealing than pervious boxes and that lead to its commercial success. These games would not have been possible without the hardware that Uemura designed."
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Masayuki Uemura, Designer of the Nintendo Entertainment System, Dies At 78

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  • by lsllll ( 830002 ) on Tuesday December 14, 2021 @07:23PM (#62080947)
    Seriously? How many dupes? Are we running out of stories?
  • Jeeze (Score:5, Funny)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday December 14, 2021 @07:25PM (#62080957)

    This dude died a week ago, now heâ(TM)s died again? What is this a video game? How many lives does he have?

    • It dunno but I bet he collected a lot of coins...
      • by splutty ( 43475 )

        And mushrooms. Don't forget the mushrooms.

        • Re:Jeeze (Score:4, Funny)

          by shaitand ( 626655 ) on Tuesday December 14, 2021 @07:42PM (#62081035) Journal
          Dude... I ate so many mushrooms while playing these games that I began to feel like I was huge, spit fireballs, and saw stars.

          Kidding aside I made sure my four year old had her first video game experience playing Super Mario Bros on an old NES then logged on to see the story of this legend passing... the first one I mean. RIP Game God.
    • That depends on if he has Game Genie or not. And then what region code he's in.

      This is probably the article for the kids who can only use the internet on Tuesday. Will rotate one each week for each region, changing his obituary dates depending on if he had Game Genie.

    • To be generous to Slashdot editors this is a report about the obituary of Masayuki Uemura appearing in the New York Times, not about his death last week. At least that is how I read it.

      • by lsllll ( 830002 )

        The subject lines of the two stories:

        Masayuki Uemura, Designer of the Nintendo Entertainment System, Dies At 78

        Masayuki Uemura, Creator Of The NES And SNES, Dies At 78

        If I read TFS in one of them, why would I even be compelled to read the second one?

  • by Travco ( 1872216 ) on Tuesday December 14, 2021 @07:47PM (#62081041)
    Thats all
  • The SNES was the last Nintendo console where they actually pushed the envelope with what a home gaming console could do. After parting ways with Sony (which lead Sony to independently release the fruits of their ill-fated joint venture as the PlayStation), Nintendo seems to have relegated themselves to producing mediocre spec'd hardware* that you'll buy because it's the only way to play their tentpole titles. R.I.P. Masayuki Uemura, you helped Nintendo shine bright for a moment in time, however fleeting.

    *

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )
      Looks like "someone" took the story seriously. Perhaps missed the first story ...
    • The Switch has vastly outsold PS5 and Xbox, so it appears innovation doesn't matter as much in hardware as it does in pricing and gaming experience.
  • The Nintendo NES would have been a much better system if they had actually paid Magnavox/Philips the patent royalties they were due upfront, rather than requiring Magnavox to sue them (after having already sued Atari, Coleco, et al). They then did it again with the Wii controller and Philips had to sue them yet again. People tend to forget about the Magnavox Odyssey system, which predated the NES by over a decade. Several patents came out of this projects even after the initial Baer patents that covered onl
    • The Odyssey was an analogue system (no CPU) and the graphics were just a few dots and lines.
      See Ralph Baer's book about how he designed it at https://archive.org/details/Vi... [archive.org]
      The Odyssey was very innovative in its day but the SNES was also a considerable advance over that.

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