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==History==
==History==
Nintendo was founded in 1889 in order to develop and distribute playing cards. Their biggest success were Hanafuda cards, which Nintendo still produces to this day, albeit Mario themed. Around the mid 1950's, Nintendo changed course and distanced themselves from the playing card industry, with the reason why often theorized to the rise in illegal gambling. Nintendo would spend the next several decades trying (and mostly failing) at many other industries. From 1963 to 1968, Nintendo founded and discontinued a taxi company, a love hotel chain, a TV network, a food company, and the Chiritori vacuum cleaner. Nintendo would eventually settle into and find a footing in the toy industry. While in debt and struggling to stay afloat with many forgettable and underperforming products, there were some success stories like the Ultra Hand and the start of a long relationship with the Walt Disney Company. In being sued by Lego over their deceivingly similar N&B blocks, though they ended up wining. Nintendo would officially enter the video game industry in 1973 with the arcade game ''Laser Clay Shooting System''. While having modest success in the arcades, Nintendo would enter the home console market in 1977 with the Color TV Game. While it was a run of the mill Pong clone, during its run, it was very successful. later, Nintendo entered the handheld market with the and Game & Watch line of consoles. There true break came in 1981 where Nintendo tasked Shigeru Miyamoto with creating a game to use the unsold copies of Radar Scope, which despite being successful in Japan, failed miserably in the west. that game would later become ''Donkey Kong'', which would change the course of gaming history and put Nintendo on the map.
Nintendo was founded in 1889 in order to develop and distribute playing cards. Their biggest success were Hanafuda cards, which Nintendo still produces to this day, albeit Mario themed. Around the mid 1950's, Nintendo changed course and distanced themselves from the playing card industry, with the reason why often theorized to the rise in illegal gambling. Nintendo would spend the next several decades trying (and mostly failing) at many other industries. From 1963 to 1968, Nintendo founded and discontinued a taxi company, a love hotel chain, a TV network, a food company, and the Chiritori vacuum cleaner. Nintendo would eventually settle into and find a footing in the toy industry. While in debt and struggling to stay afloat with many forgettable and underperforming products, there were some success stories like the Ultra Hand and the start of a long relationship with the Walt Disney Company. In being sued by Lego over their deceivingly similar N&B blocks, though they ended up wining. Nintendo would officially enter the video game industry in 1973 with the arcade game ''Laser Clay Shooting System''. While having modest success in the arcades, Nintendo would enter the home console market in 1977 with the Color TV Game. While it was a run of the mill Pong clone, during its run, it was very successful. later, Nintendo entered the handheld market with the and Game & Watch line of consoles. There true break came in 1981 where Nintendo tasked Shigeru Miyamoto with creating a game to use the unsold copies of Radar Scope, which despite being unsuccessful in Japan, failed miserably in the west. that game would later become ''Donkey Kong'', which would change the course of gaming history and put Nintendo on the map.


Nintendo would shake the industry again a few years later with the launch of the Family computer (Famicom), known as the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) outside of Japan. Though initially not anything special, with the release of ''Super Mario Bros'', Nintendo was telling their biggest success story since Donkey Kong 4 years earlier. This is also when the NES was released in North America, which was when their relationship with [[Rare Ltd.]] would begin. Tim and Chris Stamper of Ultimate Play the Game presented to Nintendo how they reverse engineered the NES, something Nintendo claimed was impossible to do, and showed them their tech demos they made from their discoveries. Impressed with what they were shown, Nintendo granted then them an unlimited budget on whatever titles they wanted to make. A string of successful NES titles came from this partnership, including ''[[rarewiki:R.C. Pro-Am|R.C. Pro-Am]]'', ''[[rarewiki:Snake Rattle 'n' Roll|Snake Rattle 'n' Roll]]'', and ''[[rarewiki:Battletoads (1991 video game)|Battletoads]]''. The Rare division would later be spun off into their own company, selling Ultimate play the game to U.S. Gold in the process.
Nintendo would shake the industry again a few years later with the launch of the Family computer (Famicom), known as the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) outside of Japan. Though initially not anything special, with the release of ''Super Mario Bros'', Nintendo was telling their biggest success story since Donkey Kong 4 years earlier. This is also when the NES was released in North America, which was when their relationship with [[Rare Ltd.]] would begin. Tim and Chris Stamper of Ultimate Play the Game presented to Nintendo how they reverse engineered the NES, something Nintendo claimed was impossible to do, and showed them their tech demos they made from their discoveries. Impressed with what they were shown, Nintendo granted then them an unlimited budget on whatever titles they wanted to make. A string of successful NES titles came from this partnership, including ''[[rarewiki:R.C. Pro-Am|R.C. Pro-Am]]'', ''[[rarewiki:Snake Rattle 'n' Roll|Snake Rattle 'n' Roll]]'', and ''[[rarewiki:Battletoads (1991 video game)|Battletoads]]''. The Rare division would later be spun off into their own company, selling Ultimate play the game to U.S. Gold in the process.

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