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Forums - Nintendo - Nintendo opens up one of its secret storage rooms

http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2016-10-13-nintendo-opens-up-one-of-its-secret-rooms

 

 

"Nintendo has opened up a storage room inside its secretive Kyoto headquarters and offered the world a glimpse into the past.

As part of a series of articles on The Legend of Zelda on the Japanese Nintendo website (viaKotaku), the company published pictures that reveal mint and boxed Famicom consoles as well as the Japan-only Disk System.

First up, we have a shelf full of mint Famicoms. The Famicom, known as the Nintendo Entertainment System, or NES, in the west, went on sale in Japan on 15th July 1983.

The Disk System was a peripheral released in Japan in 1986 that used proprietary floppy disks for data storage. While Zelda was released in North America on a physical cartridge, in Japan it made its debut on the Famicom Disk System in part to drive sales.

Here's a picture of what you get inside the Disk System box.

Watch it in action in the video, below.

We even get to see the Famicom Disk System Writer, used to let people write new games to their existing disks. They were in Japanese shops at the time the Famicom Disk System Writer was on sale.

The feature offers a cool insight into the traditionally secretive Japanese video game company. Nintendo rarely lets outsiders into its Kyoto building, so these pictures are a peek behind the curtain."

 

This Nintendo story actually had me thinking that this could be an idea that is revived with the NX, with the exception that games would be downloaded on to a blank Cartridge at a games retailer or Kiosk.

Of coarse in this day and age alot of people just download games direct to there system so there is no point. but I would say with digital sales increasing bricks and mortar stores are starting to loose quite a big portion of sales, so this could be a way for Nintendo to get retailers to push their products more.

I know it is unlikely possibilty.

 

 



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Ah love stuff like these. I have dreamt finding stashed old videogames on multiple occasions hehe =)



I knda forgot they had that Disk System in Japan. I'm assuming the disks had a higher storage capacity.



- "If you have the heart of a true winner, you can always get more pissed off than some other asshole."

Pretty much all the west ever seen of this system was in this image



This very low quality image lol sorry, wasn't mine.



Why not check me out on youtube and help me on the way to 2k subs over at www.youtube.com/stormcloudlive

I would like to take a peek in said storage room...



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That's pretty neat, though I don't see any video below



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I bet Nintendo of America has a similar storage room. Would love to see more of what is in that particular one and the Japanese one...... 

many old software developers have a number of sealed copies of their older games in storage, probably just in honor of them. Natsume for example unorthodoxically actually has an Ebay store and puts up sealed games they have now and then sporadically.... ..



Wow. The NES seems really barebones compared to the stuff the Famicom had to offer.



S.Peelman said:
I would like to take a peek in said storage room...

Would the shelves be empty when you were done?



If you didn't knew, the Japanese Famicon supported add-in chips in the cartridge, the EUSA NES did not. One example is the enhanced music in Akumajou Densetsu (Famicom) vs. Castlevania III (NES).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rh-vkpjyMTw