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[[ | {{about|the Japanese company|the console sometimes colloquially referred to as a Nintendo|[[Nintendo Entertainment System]]|the development team|[[Nintendo Entertainment Planning and Development]]}} | ||
{{company infobox | |||
|logo=New Nintendo red logo.svg | |||
|width=300px | |||
|founded=September 23, 1889 | |||
|first_release=''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]'' ([[List of games by date#1981|1981]]) | |||
|latest_release=''[[Mario & Luigi: Brothership]]'' ([[List of games by date#2024|2024]]) | |||
|president=[[Shuntaro Furukawa]] | |||
}} | |||
'''Nintendo''' | '''{{wp|Nintendo}}''' is a Japanese video game company and the creator of many popular franchises, including the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]], and the company's mascot is [[Mario]] himself. | ||
Nintendo | ==History== | ||
{{multiple image|align=left|direction=vertical|image1=Nintendo - Obsolete logo.svg|image2=Nintendo Logo.svg|width=180|footer=The company's signature red logo from 1985 to 2008, used internationally outside Japan and East Asia (top), and gray logo from 2006 to 2016 (bottom). The gray logo is still used in corporate pages.}} | |||
Originally founded as a {{wp|hanafuda}} playing card manufacturer in Kyoto, Japan, on September 23, 1889, Nintendo began exploring game-making after third president [[Hiroshi Yamauchi]] began diversifying the company's ventures. Nintendo entered the arcade industry in 1973 and the home console industry in 1977, simultaneously hiring [[Shigeru Miyamoto]] as a product designer. In 1978, Nintendo began making arcade video games, licensing titles to other companies for distribution outside Japan. In 1980, Nintendo established a North American division headed by {{wp|Minoru Arakawa}}, and the first game that would be distributed by the American division would be ''[[nwiki:Radar Scope|Radar Scope]]''. The game did not sell well in the United States, and a number of unsold cabinets remained in warehouses. | |||
Arakawa asked Yamauchi if a new game could be developed and inserted into the unsold ''Radar Scope'' cabinets.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20191109000531/https://www.ign.com/articles/2010/09/14/ign-presents-the-history-of-super-mario-bros "IGN Presents: The History of Super Mario Bros."]</ref> Yamauchi went through Nintendo's entire talent pool to see who could head the designing of a potential ''Radar Scope'' replacement, and the result was Miyamoto designing ''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]''. When ''Donkey Kong'' was released in 1981, it became a bestseller and marked the introduction of Mario. In 1983, Nintendo introduced the [[Family Computer]], distributing it abroad as the [[Nintendo Entertainment System]] two years later. Its success in Japan and North America resulted in Nintendo becoming a dominant player in the video game industry and the revival of the industry in North America, which had been negatively affected by {{wp|video game crash of 1983|a crash in 1983}}. The most successful game for the NES, ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'', further cemented Nintendo's dominance in the industry. The ''Super Mario'' franchise has since become Nintendo's flagship franchise and one of the most well-known brands to originate from video games. | |||
==Supported regions== | |||
[[File:Regiones comerciales de Nintendo.svg|thumb|Regions with official Nintendo websites]] | |||
As a {{wp|Multinational corporation|multinational company}}, Nintendo has established various regional divisions dedicated to marketing and sales of its products outside Japan, including ''Super Mario'' games, merchandise, and licensing, located in different gaming markets around the world, and all of them are wholly owned. Two major subsidiaries, Nintendo of America and Nintendo of Europe, have the authority to publish games autonomously. As of August 2024, these divisions include: | |||
*'''Nintendo Co., Ltd.''' (NCL) | |||
**[[File:Flag of Japan.png|25px]] Japan | |||
*'''Nintendo of America, Inc.''' (NOA) | |||
**[[File:Flag of Brazil.png|25px]] Federative Republic of Brazil | |||
**[[File:Flag of Argentina.png|25px]] Argentine Republic | |||
**[[File:Flag of Canada.png|25px]] Canada | |||
**[[File:Flag of Chile.png|25px]] Republic of Chile | |||
**[[File:Flag of Colombia.png|25px]] Republic of Colombia | |||
**[[File:Flag of Mexico.png|25px]] United Mexican States | |||
**[[File:Flag of Peru.png|25px]] Republic of Peru | |||
**[[File:Flag of USA.png|25px]] United States of America | |||
*'''Nintendo of Europe SE''' (NOE) | |||
**[[File:Flag of South Africa.png|25px]] Republic of South Africa | |||
**[[File:Flag of Switzerland.png|25px]] Swiss Confederation | |||
**[[File:Flag of Europe.png|25px]] European Union (except Scandinavia, the Balkans, and some former Eastern Bloc states) | |||
**[[File:Flag of UK.png|25px]] United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland | |||
*'''Nintendo Australia Pty. Limited''' (NAL) | |||
**[[File:Flag of NZ.png|25px]] New Zealand | |||
**[[File:Flag of Australia.png|25px]] Commonwealth of Australia | |||
*'''Nintendo of Korea Co., Ltd.''' (NOK) | |||
**[[File:Flag of South Korea.png|25px]] Republic of Korea | |||
*'''Nintendo (Hong Kong) Ltd.''' (NHK) | |||
**[[File:Flag of HK.png|25px]] Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China | |||
**[[File:Flag of Macau.png|25px]] Macao Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China | |||
**[[File:Flag of ROC.png|25px]] Republic of China | |||
In addition to the above subsidiaries, over the years Nintendo has officially assigned various third-party distribution companies to represent Nintendo and its products (including ''Super Mario'' products) in certain markets. These partners may have the authority to handle marketing and sales, but they may vary and are overviewed by one of the three major divisions (NCL, NOA, NOE). As of September 2023, the following partners include: | |||
*'''Active Bokei K.K.'''<ref>{{cite|title=Active Bokei K.K.|url=https://www.activeboeki.com/|publisher=Active Bokei K.K.|language=English|accessdate=July 3, 2024|archive=https://web.archive.org/web/20240603051424/https://www.activeboeki.com/}}</ref> | |||
**[[File:Flag of Indonesia.png|25px]] Republic of Indonesia | |||
**[[File:Flag of Singapore.png|25px]] Republic of Singapore | |||
**[[File:Flag of Thailand.png|25px]] Kingdom of Thailand | |||
**[[File:Flag of Philippines.png|25px]] Republic of the Philippines | |||
**[[File:Flag of Malaysia.png|25px]] Malaysia | |||
**[[File:Flag of UAE.png|25px]] United Arab Emirates | |||
**[[File:Flag of Oman.png|25px]] Sultanate of Oman | |||
**[[File:Flag of Bahrain.png|25px]] Kingdom of Bahrain | |||
**[[File:Flag of Kuwait.png|25px]] State of Kuwait | |||
**[[File:Flag of Qatar.png|25px]] State of Qatar | |||
*'''Advanced Initiative Company Trading'''<ref>{{cite|title=Advanced Initiative|url=https://advancedinitiative.com/|publisher=Advanced Initiative Co. Trdg.|language=English|accessdate=July 4, 2024}}</ref> | |||
**[[File:Flag of Saudi Arabia.png|25px]] Kingdom of Saudi Arabia | |||
*'''Bergsala AB'''<ref name=Skrebels_2019>{{cite|author=Joe Skrebels|date=December 9, 2019|url=www.ign.com/articles/2019/12/09/the-lie-that-helped-build-nintendo|title=The Lie That Helped Build Nintendo|publisher=IGN|language=English|archive=web.archive.org/web/20191221231714/https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/12/09/the-lie-that-helped-build-nintendo|accessdate=June 1, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite|url=https://www.bergsala.eu/en/|title=Home|publisher=Bergsala|language=English|archive=https://web.archive.org/web/20240614014301/https://www.bergsala.eu/en/|accessdate=September 26, 2024}}</ref> | |||
**[[File:Flag of Estonia.png|25px]] Republic of Estonia | |||
**[[File:Flag of Finland.png|25px]] Republic of Finland | |||
**[[File:Flag of Latvia.png|25px]] Republic of Latvia | |||
**[[File:Flag of Lithuania.png|25px]] Republic of Lithuania | |||
**[[File:Flag of Denmark.png|25px]] Kingdom of Denmark | |||
**[[File:Flag of Norway.png|25px]] Kingdom of Norway | |||
**[[File:Flag of Sweden.png|25px]] Kingdom of Sweden | |||
*'''CD Media S.E.'''<ref>{{cite|author=Enes K.|date=July 24, 2018|url=www.webtekno.com/nintendo-switch-turkiye-h50307.html|title=Resmi Açıklama Geldi: Nintendo Switch Türkiye'de Satışa Çıkıyor|publisher=Webtekno|language=Turkish|archive=web.archive.org/web/20181017002049/https://www.webtekno.com/nintendo-switch-turkiye-h50307.html|accessdate=June 5, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite|url=https://cdmediase.eu/partnerships.html|title=Partnerships|publisher=CD Media S.E.|language=English|archive=https://web.archive.org/web/20230329115020/https://cdmediase.eu/partnerships.html|accessdate=July 3, 2024}}</ref> | |||
**[[File:Flag of Turkey.png|25px]] Republic of Türkiye | |||
**[[File:Flag of Bulgaria.png|25px]] Republic of Bulgaria | |||
**[[File:Flag of Cyprus.png|25px]] Republic of Cyprus | |||
**[[File:Flag of Greece.png|25px]] Hellenic Republic | |||
**[[File:Flag of Romania.png|25px]] Romania | |||
**[[File:Flag of Albania.png|25px]] Republic of Albania | |||
**[[File:Flag of Croatia.png|25px]] Republic of Croatia | |||
**[[File:Flag of MK.png|25px]] Republic of North Macedonia | |||
**[[File:Flag of Serbia.png|25px]] Republic of Serbia | |||
**[[File:Flag of Slovenia.png|25px]] Republic of Slovenia | |||
*'''ConQuest Entertainment A.S.''' | |||
**[[File:Flag of Czech Republic.png|25px]] Czech Republic | |||
**[[File:Flag of Hungary.png|25px]] Hungary | |||
**[[File:Flag of Poland.png|25px]] Republic of Poland | |||
**[[File:Flag of Slovakia.png|25px]] Slovak Republic | |||
*'''Tencent'''<ref>{{cite|author=Takashi Moshizuki, Shan Li|date=April 18, 2019|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/nintendo-seeks-to-sell-the-switch-in-china-11555581221?mod=article_inline|title=Nintendo, With Tencent's Help, to Sell Switch Console in China|publisher=The Wall Street Journal|language=English|archive=https://web.archive.org/web/20191206201354/https://www.wsj.com/articles/nintendo-seeks-to-sell-the-switch-in-china-11555581221?mod=article_inline|accessdate=July 3, 2024}}</ref> | |||
**[[File:Flag of China.png|25px]] People's Republic of China | |||
*'''TorGaming, Ltd.'''<ref>{{cite|author=|date=March 12, 2019|url=il.ign.com/nintendo/40693/news/lrshvnh-byshrl-tvr-gyymyng-mshyqh-t-nyntndv-brts-bybv-rshmy|title=לראשונה בישראל – תור גיימינג משיקה את נינטנדו בארץ ביבוא רשמ|publisher=IGN Israel|language=Hebrew|archive=web.archive.org/web/20190515033409/https://il.ign.com/nintendo/40693/news/lrshvnh-byshrl-tvr-gyymyng-mshyqh-t-nyntndv-brts-bybv-rshmy|accessdate=June 5, 2024}}</ref> | |||
**[[File:Flag of Israel.png|25px]] State of Israel | |||
==Appearances in the ''Super Mario'' universe== | |||
{{multiple image | |||
|align=right | |||
|direction=horizontal | |||
|footer=The Nintendo logo appearing on Diddy Kong's cap and on the walls at [[Nintendo GameCube (battle course)|Nintendo GameCube]] in ''Mario Kart: Double Dash!!'' | |||
|image1=Diddy Kong SSB4 - Artwork.png | |||
|width1=170 | |||
|image2=NintendoGameCube-ShineSprite-MKDD.png | |||
|width2=230 | |||
}} | |||
*The ''[[WarioWare (series)|WarioWare]]'' character [[9-Volt]] calls himself "Nintendo's biggest fanboy," and his [[microgame]]s are based on or around various Nintendo games and systems such as ''[[Dr. Mario (game)|Dr. Mario]]'' and ''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]''. | |||
*[[Diddy Kong]]'s red cap has the Nintendo logo on it. | |||
*Nintendo [[Gallery:Sponsors in the Mario Kart series|sponsors]] can be seen in the background of various ''[[Mario Kart (series)|Mario Kart]]'' courses and battle arenas. | |||
*In the [[Mario Party (series)|''Mario Party'' series]], the Nintendo logo, along with the [[Hudson Soft]] logo, appears on banners in various [[minigame]]s. | |||
*In ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]'', Nintendo, along with [[Rare Ltd.|Rareware]], sponsors the boxing match between the [[Kong]]s and [[King K. Rool]] as mentioned by the [[Microphone]]. | |||
*In ''[[Mario Power Tennis]]'', the Nintendo logo appears on the [[Peach Dome]] court. | |||
*In ''[[Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour]]'' and ''Mario Power Tennis'', [[Wario]] holds up the Nintendo sign when the game boots up while stating the company's name, laughing. | |||
*In ''[[Mario Hoops 3-on-3]]'', the Nintendo logo, along with the [[Square Enix]] logo, appears on the arch next to the basket at [[Peach Field]] and on the banner and a large screen on the [[Mario Stadium (Mario Hoops 3-on-3)|Mario Stadium]] court. | |||
*In the ''[[Mario Baseball (series)|Mario Baseball]]'' series, the Nintendo logo appears on some signs in [[Mario Stadium (baseball stadium)|Mario Stadium]]. | |||
*In ''[[Mario Sports Mix]]'', the Nintendo logo appears next to the sports equipment on the banners in [[Mario Stadium (Mario Sports Mix)|Mario Stadium]]. | |||
*In ''[[Mario Tennis Open]]'', the Nintendo logo can be seen on the scoreboards in various courts. | |||
==Home consoles== | |||
[[File:Todas_las_consolas.jpg|thumb|A variety of Nintendo consoles and handhelds]] | |||
*[[nwiki:Color TV-Game|Color TV-Game]] series (1977–1982) | |||
*[[Family Computer]] (1983–2003) / [[Nintendo Entertainment System]] (1985–1995) | |||
*Super Famicom (1990–2003) / [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] (1991–1999) | |||
*[[Nintendo 64]] (1996–2003) | |||
*[[Nintendo GameCube]] (2001–2009) | |||
*[[Wii]] (2006–2013) | |||
*[[Wii U]] (2012–2017) | |||
*[[Nintendo Switch]]{{footnote|main|1}} (2017–present) | |||
===Attachments and remodels=== | |||
*[[Family Computer Disk System]] (1986–1994) | |||
*[[Satellaview]] (1995–2000) | |||
*[[Nintendo 64DD]] (1999–2001) | |||
*[[Wii#Wii Family Edition|Wii Family Edition]] (2011–2013) | |||
*[[Wii#Wii mini|Wii mini]] (2012–2017) | |||
These consoles may have different names in different markets. The NES is known as the Family Computer (or Famicom) in Japan; the Super NES, subsequently as the Super Famicom. In 2003, a plug-in gamepad device called the iQue Player was released exclusively in China, and in simple terms, it is considered a variant of the Nintendo 64. | |||
{{footnote|note|1|Although the Nintendo Switch can also function as a handheld console, it is primarily marketed as a home console by Nintendo.}} | |||
==Handheld consoles== | |||
*[[Game & Watch]] (1980–1991) | |||
*[[Game Boy]] (1989–2003) | |||
*[[Virtual Boy]] (1995–1996) | |||
*[[Game Boy Color]] (1998–2003) | |||
*[[Game Boy Advance]] (2001–2009) | |||
*[[Nintendo DS]] (2004–2013) | |||
*[[Nintendo 3DS]] (2011–2019) | |||
===Remodels=== | |||
*Game Boy Play It Loud (1996) | |||
*[[Game Boy#Game Boy Pocket|Game Boy Pocket]] (1996–1998) | |||
*[[Game Boy#Game Boy Light|Game Boy Light]] (1997–2003) | |||
*[[Game Boy Advance#Game Boy Advance SP|Game Boy Advance SP]] (2003–2009) | |||
*[[Game Boy Advance#Game Boy Micro|Game Boy Micro]] (2005–2009) | |||
*[[Nintendo DS#Nintendo DS Lite|Nintendo DS Lite]] (2006–2011) | |||
*[[Nintendo DSi]] (2008–2013) | |||
*[[Nintendo DSi#Nintendo DSi XL|Nintendo DSi XL]] (2009–2013) | |||
*[[Nintendo 3DS#Nintendo_3DS_XL|Nintendo 3DS XL]] (2012–2015) | |||
*[[Nintendo 3DS#Nintendo_2DS|Nintendo 2DS]] (2013–2020) | |||
*[[Nintendo 3DS#New Nintendo 3DS|New Nintendo 3DS]] (2014–2017) | |||
*[[Nintendo 3DS#New Nintendo 3DS|New Nintendo 3DS XL]] (2014–2019) | |||
*[[Nintendo 3DS#New Nintendo 2DS XL|New Nintendo 2DS XL]] (2017–2020) | |||
*[[Nintendo Switch#Nintendo Switch Lite|Nintendo Switch Lite]] (2019–present) | |||
Between 2004 and 2018, Nintendo authorized the release of some of its portable consoles in the mainland Chinese market under the "[[iQue]]" brand. For example, the Nintendo DS and the Nintendo 3DS XL are referred to as the iQue DS and the iQue 3DS XL, respectively, in China. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery> | |||
Nintendo-Blue logo.png|The blue Nintendo logo variant, used in Japanese versions of Nintendo games | |||
Nintendo gold MK64 logo.png|The gold Nintendo logo from the start-up of ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' | |||
Nintendo logo DKRDS.png|Sprite of a Nintendo logo variant, from ''[[Diddy Kong Racing DS]]'' | |||
MP1-3 Nintendo logo.png|The white Nintendo logo in a black background as seen in the first three ''[[Mario Party (series)|Mario Party]]'' titles | |||
Nintendo's Logo in Super Mario Maker.png|The Nintendo logo recreated in the ''Super Mario Bros.'' game style in ''[[Super Mario Maker]]'' | |||
Bg-red.jpg|Background featuring characters of the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]] created by Nintendo | |||
Nintendo recruitment book Nintendo Headquarters.jpg|Artwork of Nintendo's Kyoto headquarters from its recruitment book, showing a [[Warp Pipe]] at the bottom left corner | |||
</gallery> | |||
==See also== | |||
*[[Shigeru Miyamoto]] | |||
*[[Satoru Iwata]] | |||
*[[Hiroshi Yamauchi]] | |||
*[[Yoshiaki Koizumi]] | |||
*[[Tatsumi Kimishima]] | |||
*[[Koji Kondo]] | |||
*[[Gunpei Yokoi]] | |||
*[[Reggie Fils-Aimé]] | |||
*[[Doug Bowser]] | |||
==Names in other languages== | |||
{{foreign names | |||
|Jap=任天堂 | |||
|JapR=Nintendō | |||
|Jap2=ニンテンドー | |||
|Jap2R=Nintendō | |||
|Jap3=ニンテンドウ | |||
|Jap3R=Nintendō | |||
|JapM=The formal name of the company; in {{wp|hiragana}} it is written as 「にんてんどう」, two {{wp|Kana|kanas}} or {{wp|Mora (linguistics)#Japanese|moras}} {{wp|furigana|per kanji}}. Each of the {{wp|kanji}} that make up its formal name means the following: | |||
*任 (''nin'') means "responsibility," "work," or "obligation." | |||
*天 (''ten'') means "sky." | |||
*堂 (''dō'') means "stately," "bless," or "sanctuary." | |||
**天堂 (''tendō'') means "heaven." | |||
|Jap2M=Rough katakana form used for the Japanese names of some consoles. | |||
|Jap3M=Rough katakana form, written with the kana "u" (ウ) instead of the {{wp|chōonpu|long sound symbol}} (ー). | |||
|JapN=This name comes from the Japanese saying 「運を天に任せる」 (''un o ten ni makaseru''), meaning "to leave one's luck to heaven." Consequently, Nintendo officially translates its name as "Leave Luck to Heaven." However, the historical validity of this is disputed, as the kanji for "Nintendo" can be translated in multiple other ways (e.g., "Temple of Free Hanafuda," referencing the company's origins as a playing card company); late president [[Hiroshi Yamauchi]] admitted in ''The History of Nintendo'' that he did not actually know what "Nintendo" meant, stating that the official translation was accepted by the company only because it sounded like "a plausible explanation."<ref>{{cite|author=Brian Ashcraft|date=August 3, 2017|title="Nintendo" Probably Doesn't Mean What You Think It Does|url=https://kotaku.com/nintendo-probably-doesnt-mean-what-you-think-it-does-5649625|publisher=Kotaku|language=English|accessdate=September 16, 2024|archive=https://web.archive.org/web/20240819115547/https://kotaku.com/nintendo-probably-doesnt-mean-what-you-think-it-does-5649625}}</ref> | |||
|Jap3N=Used only in ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]''{{'}}s Japanese name. | |||
|Kor=닌텐도 | |||
|KorR=Nintendo | |||
|Chi=任天堂 | |||
|ChiR=Rèntiāntáng | |||
|Fin=Nintendon | |||
|FinN=''Captain N: The Game Master'' | |||
|Fin2=Nintendo | |||
|Rus=Нинтендо | |||
|RusR=Nintendo | |||
|Heb=נינטנדו | |||
|HebR=Nintendo | |||
|Gre=Νιντέντο | |||
|GreR=Ninténto | |||
|Ara=نينتندو<ref>{{cite|title=نينتندو السعودية (الممثل الرسمي)|url=https://x.com/NintendoSaudi|publisher=X|language=Arabic|accessdate=July 6, 2024}}</ref> | |||
|AraR=Nintendo | |||
}} | |||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
==External links== | |||
{{NIWA|ARMSWiki=1|Bulbapedia=1|FZeroWiki=1|FireEmblem=1|GoldenSun=1|HardDrop=Category:Nintendo|Icaruspedia=1|Inkipedia=1|LylatWiki=1|MetroidWiki=1|NWiki=1|Nookipedia=1|Pikipedia=1|SmashWiki=1|StarfyWiki=1|StrategyWiki=Category:Nintendo|WarsWiki=1|WiKirby=1|WikiBound=1|ZeldaWiki=1}} | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/jp Official Japan website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/us Official United States website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/en-ca Official Canada (English) website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/fr-ca Official Canada (French) website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/en-gb Official UK & Ireland website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/es-mx Official Mexico website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/pt-br Official Brazil website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/es-co Official Colombia website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/es-ar Official Argentina website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/es-cl Official Chile website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/es-pe Official Peru website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/eu Official Europe website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.dk Official Denmark website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.fi Official Finland website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.no Official Norway website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.se Official Sweden website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.hu Official Hungary website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.pl Official Poland website] | |||
*[https://mojenintendo.cz Official Czechia website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.sk Official Slovakia website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.co.il Official Israeli website] | |||
*[https://www.active-gulf.com/index.php Official U.A.E. website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.sa/en Official Saudi website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/au Official Oceania website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.co.kr Official South Korea website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com.hk Official Hong Kong website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.tw Official Taiwan website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/sg Official Singapore website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/my Official Malaysia website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/ph Official Philippines website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/th Official Thailand website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.com/en-za Official South Africa website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendoswitch.com.cn Official mainland China website] | |||
*[https://www.nintendo.gr Official Greek website] | |||
*[https://www.cdmedia.gr/nintendo-support/?ln=hr Official Croatian website] | |||
*[https://www.cdmedia.gr/nintendo-support/?ln=bg Official Bulgarian website] | |||
*[https://www.cdmedia.gr/nintendo-support/?ln=sl Official Slovenian website] | |||
*[https://www.cdmedia.gr/nintendo-support/?ln=ro Official Romanian website] | |||
*[https://www.cdmedia.gr/nintendo-support/?ln=sr Official Serbian website] | |||
{{Companies}} | |||
[[de:Nintendo]] | |||
[[it:Nintendo]] | |||
[[Category:Companies]] | [[Category:Companies]] | ||
[[Category:Nintendo|*]] |
Latest revision as of 17:11, November 6, 2024
- This article is about the Japanese company. For the console sometimes colloquially referred to as a Nintendo, see Nintendo Entertainment System. For the development team, see Nintendo Entertainment Planning and Development.
Nintendo | |
---|---|
Founded | September 23, 1889[?] |
First Super Mario game | Donkey Kong (1981) |
Latest Super Mario game | Mario & Luigi: Brothership (2024) |
Current president | Shuntaro Furukawa |
Nintendo is a Japanese video game company and the creator of many popular franchises, including the Super Mario franchise, and the company's mascot is Mario himself.
History
Originally founded as a hanafuda playing card manufacturer in Kyoto, Japan, on September 23, 1889, Nintendo began exploring game-making after third president Hiroshi Yamauchi began diversifying the company's ventures. Nintendo entered the arcade industry in 1973 and the home console industry in 1977, simultaneously hiring Shigeru Miyamoto as a product designer. In 1978, Nintendo began making arcade video games, licensing titles to other companies for distribution outside Japan. In 1980, Nintendo established a North American division headed by Minoru Arakawa, and the first game that would be distributed by the American division would be Radar Scope. The game did not sell well in the United States, and a number of unsold cabinets remained in warehouses.
Arakawa asked Yamauchi if a new game could be developed and inserted into the unsold Radar Scope cabinets.[1] Yamauchi went through Nintendo's entire talent pool to see who could head the designing of a potential Radar Scope replacement, and the result was Miyamoto designing Donkey Kong. When Donkey Kong was released in 1981, it became a bestseller and marked the introduction of Mario. In 1983, Nintendo introduced the Family Computer, distributing it abroad as the Nintendo Entertainment System two years later. Its success in Japan and North America resulted in Nintendo becoming a dominant player in the video game industry and the revival of the industry in North America, which had been negatively affected by a crash in 1983. The most successful game for the NES, Super Mario Bros., further cemented Nintendo's dominance in the industry. The Super Mario franchise has since become Nintendo's flagship franchise and one of the most well-known brands to originate from video games.
Supported regions
As a multinational company, Nintendo has established various regional divisions dedicated to marketing and sales of its products outside Japan, including Super Mario games, merchandise, and licensing, located in different gaming markets around the world, and all of them are wholly owned. Two major subsidiaries, Nintendo of America and Nintendo of Europe, have the authority to publish games autonomously. As of August 2024, these divisions include:
- Nintendo Co., Ltd. (NCL)
- Nintendo of America, Inc. (NOA)
- Nintendo of Europe SE (NOE)
- Nintendo Australia Pty. Limited (NAL)
- Nintendo of Korea Co., Ltd. (NOK)
- Nintendo (Hong Kong) Ltd. (NHK)
In addition to the above subsidiaries, over the years Nintendo has officially assigned various third-party distribution companies to represent Nintendo and its products (including Super Mario products) in certain markets. These partners may have the authority to handle marketing and sales, but they may vary and are overviewed by one of the three major divisions (NCL, NOA, NOE). As of September 2023, the following partners include:
- Active Bokei K.K.[2]
- Advanced Initiative Company Trading[3]
- Bergsala AB[4][5]
- CD Media S.E.[6][7]
- ConQuest Entertainment A.S.
- Tencent[8]
- TorGaming, Ltd.[9]
Appearances in the Super Mario universe
- The WarioWare character 9-Volt calls himself "Nintendo's biggest fanboy," and his microgames are based on or around various Nintendo games and systems such as Dr. Mario and Donkey Kong.
- Diddy Kong's red cap has the Nintendo logo on it.
- Nintendo sponsors can be seen in the background of various Mario Kart courses and battle arenas.
- In the Mario Party series, the Nintendo logo, along with the Hudson Soft logo, appears on banners in various minigames.
- In Donkey Kong 64, Nintendo, along with Rareware, sponsors the boxing match between the Kongs and King K. Rool as mentioned by the Microphone.
- In Mario Power Tennis, the Nintendo logo appears on the Peach Dome court.
- In Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour and Mario Power Tennis, Wario holds up the Nintendo sign when the game boots up while stating the company's name, laughing.
- In Mario Hoops 3-on-3, the Nintendo logo, along with the Square Enix logo, appears on the arch next to the basket at Peach Field and on the banner and a large screen on the Mario Stadium court.
- In the Mario Baseball series, the Nintendo logo appears on some signs in Mario Stadium.
- In Mario Sports Mix, the Nintendo logo appears next to the sports equipment on the banners in Mario Stadium.
- In Mario Tennis Open, the Nintendo logo can be seen on the scoreboards in various courts.
Home consoles
- Color TV-Game series (1977–1982)
- Family Computer (1983–2003) / Nintendo Entertainment System (1985–1995)
- Super Famicom (1990–2003) / Super Nintendo Entertainment System (1991–1999)
- Nintendo 64 (1996–2003)
- Nintendo GameCube (2001–2009)
- Wii (2006–2013)
- Wii U (2012–2017)
- Nintendo Switch1 (2017–present)
Attachments and remodels
- Family Computer Disk System (1986–1994)
- Satellaview (1995–2000)
- Nintendo 64DD (1999–2001)
- Wii Family Edition (2011–2013)
- Wii mini (2012–2017)
These consoles may have different names in different markets. The NES is known as the Family Computer (or Famicom) in Japan; the Super NES, subsequently as the Super Famicom. In 2003, a plug-in gamepad device called the iQue Player was released exclusively in China, and in simple terms, it is considered a variant of the Nintendo 64.
1 - Although the Nintendo Switch can also function as a handheld console, it is primarily marketed as a home console by Nintendo.
Handheld consoles
- Game & Watch (1980–1991)
- Game Boy (1989–2003)
- Virtual Boy (1995–1996)
- Game Boy Color (1998–2003)
- Game Boy Advance (2001–2009)
- Nintendo DS (2004–2013)
- Nintendo 3DS (2011–2019)
Remodels
- Game Boy Play It Loud (1996)
- Game Boy Pocket (1996–1998)
- Game Boy Light (1997–2003)
- Game Boy Advance SP (2003–2009)
- Game Boy Micro (2005–2009)
- Nintendo DS Lite (2006–2011)
- Nintendo DSi (2008–2013)
- Nintendo DSi XL (2009–2013)
- Nintendo 3DS XL (2012–2015)
- Nintendo 2DS (2013–2020)
- New Nintendo 3DS (2014–2017)
- New Nintendo 3DS XL (2014–2019)
- New Nintendo 2DS XL (2017–2020)
- Nintendo Switch Lite (2019–present)
Between 2004 and 2018, Nintendo authorized the release of some of its portable consoles in the mainland Chinese market under the "iQue" brand. For example, the Nintendo DS and the Nintendo 3DS XL are referred to as the iQue DS and the iQue 3DS XL, respectively, in China.
Gallery
The gold Nintendo logo from the start-up of Mario Kart 64
Sprite of a Nintendo logo variant, from Diddy Kong Racing DS
The white Nintendo logo in a black background as seen in the first three Mario Party titles
The Nintendo logo recreated in the Super Mario Bros. game style in Super Mario Maker
Background featuring characters of the Super Mario franchise created by Nintendo
Artwork of Nintendo's Kyoto headquarters from its recruitment book, showing a Warp Pipe at the bottom left corner
See also
- Shigeru Miyamoto
- Satoru Iwata
- Hiroshi Yamauchi
- Yoshiaki Koizumi
- Tatsumi Kimishima
- Koji Kondo
- Gunpei Yokoi
- Reggie Fils-Aimé
- Doug Bowser
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | 任天堂 Nintendō |
The formal name of the company; in hiragana it is written as 「にんてんどう」, two kanas or moras per kanji. Each of the kanji that make up its formal name means the following:
|
This name comes from the Japanese saying 「運を天に任せる」 (un o ten ni makaseru), meaning "to leave one's luck to heaven." Consequently, Nintendo officially translates its name as "Leave Luck to Heaven." However, the historical validity of this is disputed, as the kanji for "Nintendo" can be translated in multiple other ways (e.g., "Temple of Free Hanafuda," referencing the company's origins as a playing card company); late president Hiroshi Yamauchi admitted in The History of Nintendo that he did not actually know what "Nintendo" meant, stating that the official translation was accepted by the company only because it sounded like "a plausible explanation."[10] |
ニンテンドー[?] Nintendō |
Rough katakana form used for the Japanese names of some consoles. | ||
ニンテンドウ[?] Nintendō |
Rough katakana form, written with the kana "u" (ウ) instead of the long sound symbol (ー). | Used only in Super Smash Bros.'s Japanese name. | |
Arabic | نينتندو[11] Nintendo |
- | |
Chinese | 任天堂[?] Rèntiāntáng |
- | |
Finnish | Nintendon[?] | - | Captain N: The Game Master |
Nintendo[?] | |||
Greek | Νιντέντο[?] Ninténto |
- | |
Hebrew | נינטנדו[?] Nintendo |
- | |
Korean | 닌텐도[?] Nintendo |
- | |
Russian | Нинтендо[?] Nintendo |
- |
References
- ^ "IGN Presents: The History of Super Mario Bros."
- ^ Active Bokei K.K.. Active Bokei K.K. (English). Retrieved July 3, 2024. (Archived June 3, 2024, 05:14:24 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ Advanced Initiative. Advanced Initiative Co. Trdg. (English). Retrieved July 4, 2024.
- ^ Joe Skrebels (December 9, 2019). The Lie That Helped Build Nintendo. IGN (English). Retrieved June 1, 2024. (Archived December 21, 2019, 23:17:14 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ Home. Bergsala (English). Retrieved September 26, 2024. (Archived June 14, 2024, 01:43:01 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ Enes K. (July 24, 2018). Resmi Açıklama Geldi: Nintendo Switch Türkiye'de Satışa Çıkıyor. Webtekno (Turkish). Retrieved June 5, 2024. (Archived October 17, 2018, 00:20:49 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ Partnerships. CD Media S.E. (English). Retrieved July 3, 2024. (Archived March 29, 2023, 11:50:20 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ Takashi Moshizuki, Shan Li (April 18, 2019). Nintendo, With Tencent's Help, to Sell Switch Console in China. The Wall Street Journal (English). Retrieved July 3, 2024. (Archived December 6, 2019, 20:13:54 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ March 12, 2019. לראשונה בישראל – תור גיימינג משיקה את נינטנדו בארץ ביבוא רשמ. IGN Israel (Hebrew). Retrieved June 5, 2024. (Archived May 15, 2019, 03:34:09 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ Brian Ashcraft (August 3, 2017). "Nintendo" Probably Doesn't Mean What You Think It Does. Kotaku (English). Retrieved September 16, 2024. (Archived August 19, 2024, 11:55:47 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ نينتندو السعودية (الممثل الرسمي). X (Arabic). Retrieved July 6, 2024.
External links
- Official Japan website
- Official United States website
- Official Canada (English) website
- Official Canada (French) website
- Official UK & Ireland website
- Official Mexico website
- Official Brazil website
- Official Colombia website
- Official Argentina website
- Official Chile website
- Official Peru website
- Official Europe website
- Official Denmark website
- Official Finland website
- Official Norway website
- Official Sweden website
- Official Hungary website
- Official Poland website
- Official Czechia website
- Official Slovakia website
- Official Israeli website
- Official U.A.E. website
- Official Saudi website
- Official Oceania website
- Official South Korea website
- Official Hong Kong website
- Official Taiwan website
- Official Singapore website
- Official Malaysia website
- Official Philippines website
- Official Thailand website
- Official South Africa website
- Official mainland China website
- Official Greek website
- Official Croatian website
- Official Bulgarian website
- Official Slovenian website
- Official Romanian website
- Official Serbian website