The year is 1889, before the acolades and awards... Nintendo got its start from making hanafuda cards! For a century they grew and planned to discover just what sells... Making vacuums and ultra hand And love testers and love hotels! But they soon zeroed in on games, like the game and watch and color tv~ IN '81 THEY MADE DONKEY KONG AND THE REST IS HISTORY!
This is the history of Nintendo Spanning the years, hanafuda to Mario... Straight from Kyoto, with a guy named Miyamoto This is the history of Nintendo
You are right wasn't for pong being copied by Nintendo there wouldn't be a Nintendo clone. Atari did pretty much started it all and the Japanese copied
@Alex Burton No, that was Super Mario Bros. 2 aka Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels. Super Mario Bros. came out in 1985. You should know that since this year is his 35th anniversary and literally every Nintendo channel is talking about it and the possibly 35th anniversary 3D Mario remaster collection.
After seeing this video I am so very glad that wasn't my first Nintendo system. I know that was all that they really had back then. I also always knew they been around since the late 1800s. But I am so very thankful that my first Nintendo system was the original NES. This is going back to the mid to late 80s. I am 38 years old and I am still a huge Nintendo fan. As I always will be.
I consider myself to be a pretty big fan of Nintendo, and I didn't know this thing existed until this video, so thanks for showing us some unknown Nintendo history.
Nintendo was Bicycle Company then playing cards... the company name was changes when they started the cards. I like your channel and found you from Superhero Game Squad.
In 41 years time people will be laughing at the XBOX & PS4. If it wasn't for machines like this old Nintendo the gaming industry simply wouldn't exist.
Nintendo rescued the U.S. video gaming industry, starting in late 1984. It paid off in the late 1980s/early 1990s, when merchandise featuring video game characters Mario from Super Mario Bros. and Link from The Legend of Zelda started appearing everywhere. R.O.B. the Robot was just the "Trojan Horse" they needed to gain access to the still- struggling North-American video game market in 1985, as a way to get Americans to love home video game consoles again. In 1986, Super Mario Bros. was released, and it kicked off an era of modern video gaming, and spawned two sequels on the NES in 1988 (Super Mario Bros. 2) and 1990 (Super Mario Bros. 3).