Nintendo Museum in Japan will open on Oct 2
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Tickets for the museum for October and November went on sale on Aug 20 and are priced at 3,300 yen (S$29) for adults.
PHOTO: NINTENDO.COM/JP
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TOKYO - Japan’s Nintendo said on Aug 20 it will open its much-awaited first museum on Oct 2 featuring vintage video games and an interactive shoot-em-up with Super Mario characters.
The museum in Kyoto’s Uji city is located inside a renovated old factory built in 1969, where the gaming giant began its life making Western-style and Japanese playing cards and later repaired consoles.
The company on Aug 20 also released a video of Mr Shigeru Miyamoto, the renowned creator of Super Mario Bros and other famous games, giving a sneak preview of what is inside.
“The Nintendo Museum is a place where visitors can learn about Nintendo’s commitment to manufacturing that places importance on play and originality,” Mr Miyamoto said in the clip.
Along with the shooting game and some of the firm’s first consoles, exhibits include a giant controller that two people operate and another featuring ancient Japanese poems.
The company announced plans for the museum in 2021, part of efforts to widen its revenue stream, and it was originally meant to open earlier in 2024.
Super Nintendo World, the company’s first theme park
Part of the Universal Studios Japan complex in Osaka, it features a Mario Kart ride with a real-life Bowser’s Castle.
Nintendo began life in 1889 as a manufacturer of Japanese “hanafuda” cards and launched its first home video game machines, known as TV Game 15 and TV Game 6, in 1977.
The Super Mario Bros games were launched in 1985, two years after the company began selling its Nintendo Entertainment System console.
Tickets for the museum for October and November went on sale on Aug 20 and are priced at 3,300 yen (S$29) for adults. AFP

