Thanks for the legacy Mr. Y, from the bottom of my heart.
http://www.usgamer.net/articles/hiroshi ... lvet-glove

ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
Eh? That`s as much of an over exaggeration as "Nintendo saved videogames". It`s simply not true. Ultima, Wizardry, Dune II, Eye of the Beholder, X-Com, Doom and many other genre defining experiences that would influence the industry for decades to come would`ve still existed irrespective of Yamauchi and Nintendo.Skykid wrote:Farewell to modern gaming's founding father.
I bet home gaming would've ended up more computer-focused without Nintendo, at least in the US. Yeah, there's *a lot* of influential videogames of that era outside of the NES. I think this is often the perspective of someone from my generation who grew up with the NES-- it was so hugely popular here that to a lot of people that *was* videogames.Jonathan Ingram wrote:Eh? That`s as much of an over exaggeration as "Nintendo saved videogames". It`s simply not true. Ultima, Wizardry, Dune II, Eye of the Beholder, X-Com, Doom and many other genre defining experiences that would influence the industry for decades to come would`ve still existed irrespective of Yamauchi and Nintendo.Skykid wrote:Farewell to modern gaming's founding father.
RegalSin wrote:You can't even drive across the country Naked anymore
I think Nintendo laid a groundwork in the 8-bit era that formed the entire modern games industry and still echoes strongly today. I credit Yamauchi with much of that business achievement.Jonathan Ingram wrote:Eh? That`s as much of an over exaggeration as "Nintendo saved videogames". It`s simply not true. Ultima, Wizardry, Dune II, Eye of the Beholder, X-Com, Doom and many other genre defining experiences that would influence the industry for decades to come would`ve still existed irrespective of Yamauchi and Nintendo.Skykid wrote:Farewell to modern gaming's founding father.
Is this a real quote? Genuine question, because I don't remember saying that (unless it's been used completely out of context.) Can you remind me of where it was I made the statement, and what it was in relation to?Jonathan Ingram wrote:That`s as much of an over exaggeration as "Nintendo saved videogames"
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
You forgot the 'modern' part.Specineff wrote:Brilliant businessman? Yes. Father of gaming? No. David Crane and Warren Robinett had made games that were equally or even more influential a few years earlier, just to show two examples.
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
BIL wrote: "Small sack, LOTS OF CUM" - Nikola Tesla
Nah, it's about touching witches on our DSes.drauch wrote:Isn't modern gaming now mainly FPS, MMORPGs, sports titles, and sims? Certainly is in the U.S..
Not your quote, it`s a belief commonly held by people alien to the PC gaming scene in the 80s and 90s.Skykid wrote:Is this a real quote? Genuine question, because I don't remember saying that (unless it's been used completely out of context.) Can you remind me of where it was I made the statement, and what it was in relation to?
... has come to be dominated almost entirely by Western developers who had made personal computers their home for decades before migrating to consoles with the introduction of the Xbox line by Microsoft. Elder Scrolls, Mass Effect and Call of Duty don`t have their roots in Mario and Donkey Kong no matter how influential the latter two might have been for their time.I think Nintendo laid a groundwork in the 8-bit era that formed the entire modern games industry and still echoes strongly today.
I think you misunderstand. I don`t deny the important role Nintendo played in revitalizing the console segment of the industry. It`s the sweeping statement that Yamauchi is modern gaming`s founding father(no less) that I contest.EmperorIng wrote:What Ingram I think is missing, is despite the success and influence of those PC games, is the innovative and successful ways Nintendo managed, under Yamauchi's ruthlessly pragmatic approaches, to single-handedly revitalize the home console scene (this is incorrectly attributed as 'Nintendo saving gaming' when everyone at the time saw PCs and arcades doing just fine) - as well as turn Nintendo into a gleaming success almost instantaneously.
Agreed. It's a tribute in his passing to recognise the man for rekindling the industry with an iron hand and clairvoyant business acumen. Lest we forget, we come here to celebrate a form of media - a business is all it really is.EmperorIng wrote:I don't think it's a stretch to call him the father of modern console gaming. Yamauchi is an interesting bridge between the pre-crash industry and the post-Famicom industry, and many pioneering techniques of management, development, and marketing can be attributed to the early days at the Nintendo offices; it would be hard to deny that.
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
His real legacy was the realization that software and artists make video games great, not flashy tech. As we all know, a system is successful because of great software with great design.Specineff wrote:Brilliant businessman? Yes. Father of gaming? No. David Crane and Warren Robinett had made games that were equally or even more influential a few years earlier, just to show two examples.
Although I know it all already, that's a great article. Like a well arranged synopsis of the entirety of David Sheff's Game Over.http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/e ... tendo.html
The New Yorker had a great piece on Yamauchi. Apparently he was a frequenter of love hotels and a college dropout.
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts