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62t
10-23-2005, 06:07 PM
Twenty years ago, Nintendo released the NES in selected markets in the USA. On October 18 1985, there were NES units on sale in New York electronics and toy stores, and the NES was national by the following February.

Of course, the NES was the US version of Nintendo "Family Computer" or "Famicom", which has been released in Japan in 1983. It was re-designed for the US market to look like a VCR, so it didn't resemble older video game machines like the Atari or Colecovision. Those consoles had caused the huge video game crash of 1983 by releasing too many console versions and too many rubbish games too quickly, and at too high a price. (Hmm, sounds familiar... - Ed)

http://palgn.com.au/media/pics/art_3271_id_18.jpeg
The classic machine, in all it's VCR-like glory.

The US launch was lucky to have Super Mario Bros as a launch title, but the launch line-up was quite robust, even by today's standards. The launch line-up was:

Super Mario Bros.
Clu Clu Land
Ice Climber
Kung Fu
Pinball
Donkey Kong Jr. Math
Wrecking Crew
Mach Rider
Excitebike
Baseball
Golf
Tennis
10 Yard Fight
Wild Gunman
Duck Hunt
Hogan's Alley

So how did the NES change gaming history? Well, first it re-created the US video game market after it had been almost non-existent for the two years since the crash. Nintendo did this in a variety of ways. The NES had powerful hardware at a cheap price, and Nintendo invented modern inventory management and marketing strategies to get the system into as many stores (and therefore homes) as possible.

Secondly, Nintendo were the first company to openly court 3rd parties to make games for their console, and to control game numbers and quality. Activision, a break away company from Atari, became the world's first 3rd party developer when a court order forced them to pay a fee to Atari to develop games for the VCS.

Nintendo adopted this strategy as a contract, and implemented it via a lockout chip in every cartridge. So you had to pay Nintendo to make a game that would work on their system, the game had to be of sufficient quality, and you could only release so many games a year, to kepp quality levels high.

Finally, it was the hardware itself. The NES was far more powerful then any other console at the time, and was actually cheaper to buy. It's unlikely any jump in level of graphical detail between generations has been as great as that between the Atari VCS generation and the NES (you could argue the jump from 2D to 3D, but early 3D graphics were pitiful).

http://palgn.com.au/media/pics/art_3271_id_20.jpeghttp://palgn.com.au/media/pics/art_3271_id_23.jpeg
From this

http://palgn.com.au/media/pics/art_3271_id_24.jpeg
to this

And the hardware allowed such new levels of gameplay that most games today still have the same basic structure as NES games. It was the first system to create a new type of game that played differently to short-burst arcade games. For example, the Legend of Zelda was released mid 1986, and it was the first ever console game in the US with a save feature - the first game that took more then one sitting to complete.

Well, there you have it. If you have one at home, We'd suggest dragging out the old NES (in our case, it's still plugged into the TV right now!), playing a game of Super Mario Bros, and tipping your glass to the system that re-invented the whole thing we're on about.

so
HAPPY BIRTHDAY NINTENDO ENTERTAINMENT SYSTEM

Ikohn4ever
10-23-2005, 06:12 PM
well we already mentioned it was marios bday awhile back, though I think if anyone should be celebrated it should be Luigi's bday. Gotta love second bananas

drsuper23
10-23-2005, 06:19 PM
The good old days, when gameplay was mostly what mattered. Happy B-day.

GuilewasNK
10-23-2005, 06:24 PM
Thanks 62t! I forgot about this. Happy B-Day to the NES!

RAMSTORIA
10-23-2005, 06:24 PM
The good old days, when gameplay was mostly what mattered. Happy B-day.

quoted for truth

Kain Vincent
10-23-2005, 07:19 PM
Happy (late) Birthday, NES. Playing Megaman and TMNT, those were some good times.

IkilledLassic
10-24-2005, 02:24 AM
Happy Bday NES, I didnt have you when I was a kid (I had SMS), but I played the damn thing for hours at my friends' houses (Super Dodge Ball, Wrestlemania, Zelda, Punchout come to mind)...

Now I have over 150 games for it... Ice Climber is still my favorite though.

Mafia
10-24-2005, 02:28 AM
I think it's time to (finally) reassemble my old NES and pop a few of the real classics in.

Josef
10-24-2005, 12:16 PM
It was re-designed for the US market to look like a VCR, so it didn't resemble older video game machines like the Atari or Colecovision.

So that's why so many people referred to the games as "Nintendo tapes." :lol:

wageslave
10-25-2005, 10:36 AM
as a console gamer I remembered how utterly blown away I was by Super Mario Brothers when I first saw it as a kid. The world was larger than one screen and it was just beautiful. It was light years ahead of games for the Atari. I know that the PC and Sega Master System also had good stuff, but this was before the internet and Nintendo was the first company IMO to bring quality modern games to the masses.

Puffa469
10-25-2005, 11:33 AM
It was November of 1985. The principal of the elementary school I went to rounded up a few of the bigger kids in the class and took us to Macy's in New York City. We were there to pick up a bunch of Apple IIC computers for our school and I, and a couple of my classmates were there to help carry the boxes of computers and monitors out to the van we had made the trip in.

But as soon as we got to the electronics section of Macy's, all thoughts of Apple computers were forgotten, because there on display in all its glory was the brand new Nintendo Entertainment System!

I had never heard of it before, but soon I was captivated by shooting things in Hogans Alley, and playing Excitebike. And the damn thing came with a ROBOT!!! It was a kids wet dream. It made my Atari look like a steaming pile in comparison.

It was still a couple years before I got my hands on my very own nes, but my love of all things Nintendo was born on that day. After that I got closer to any friend that was lucky enough to have their own Nes, and I went to arcades seeking out 'Play Choice Ten' NES arcade units. And when I got my first job, I saved every damn penny until I had enough to bring home a nes of my own! And the rest is history! =D

nwaugh
10-25-2005, 12:14 PM
The writer of the article needs an editor badly.

javeryh
10-25-2005, 12:26 PM
I remember mowing the neighbor's 1.5 acre lawn for $8 every week (it took me almost an entire Saturday to complete) with a push-it-yourself lawnmower for the entire summer of 1986 so I could buy one. It was totally worth it - I ended up getting the stand alone system for $80 because I couldn't save enough money to get the Zapper and R.O.B bundle for $130 (which came with 3 carts - totally unheard of nowadays)...

daroga
10-26-2005, 10:41 AM
1UP has a nice article series going this week:

http://www.1up.com/do/feature?cId=3144947

Graystone
10-29-2005, 03:13 AM
Man I feel old. I remember my sister and I getting one for xmas. Greatest xmas evar. I think I gaind a few pounds that year by playing nes all day for oh about 2 years. :lol: