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  2. History of Nintendo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Nintendo

    By tying playing cards to Disney and selling books explaining the different games playable with the cards, Nintendo could sell the product to Japanese households. The tie-in was a success and the company sold at least 600,000 card packs in one year. Due to this success, in 1962, Yamauchi took Nintendo public, listing the company in Osaka Stock ...

  3. Nintendo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo

    The company entered into a partnership with The Walt Disney Company to incorporate its characters into playing cards, which opened it up to the children's market and resulted in a boost to Nintendo's playing card business. [4] [5] [28] Nintendo automated the production of Japanese playing cards using backing paper, and also developed a ...

  4. List of Nintendo products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nintendo_products

    1 Toys and playing cards. Toggle Toys and playing cards subsection. 1.1 Amiibo. 2 Arcade products. 3 Color TV-Game. 4 Game & Watch. ... Nintendo [4] SF-HiSplitter ...

  5. Cricut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricut

    Cricut Joy JCTR101 110 mm (4.5 in) by 1.2 m (4 ft) 5 in/s March 2020 Automatic support for 3 tools, and 50+ materials Cricut Explore 3 CXPL203 300 mm (11.7 in) by 3.7 m (12 ft) 0.29 m/s (11.3 in/s) June 2021 Automatic support for 6 tools, and 100+ materials Cricut Maker 3 CXPL303 Automatic support for 13 tools, and 300+ materials Cricut

  6. Shigeru Miyamoto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shigeru_Miyamoto

    In the 1970s, Nintendo was a relatively small Japanese company that sold playing cards and other novelties, although it had started to branch out into toys and games in the 1960s. Through a mutual friend, Miyamoto's father arranged an interview with Nintendo president Hiroshi Yamauchi .

  7. Fusajiro Yamauchi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusajiro_Yamauchi

    And so, in 1907, Fusajiro expanded Nintendo’s operations by making a deal with Nihon Senbai [note 2] (now Japan Tobacco) to sell Nintendo cards in cigarette shops throughout all of Japan. [6] By the time of Fusajiro’s death in 1929, Nintendo had become the largest playing-card company in Japan. [10]

  8. Video games in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_games_in_Japan

    Before the NES/Famicom, Nintendo was known as a moderately successful Japanese toy and playing card manufacturer, but the popularity of the NES/Famicom helped the company grow into an internationally recognized name almost synonymous with video games as Atari had been, [71] and set the stage for Japanese dominance of the video game industry. [72]

  9. Gunpei Yokoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunpei_Yokoi

    He worked on toys until the company decided to make video games in 1974, [3] when he became one of its first game designers, only preceded by Genyo Takeda. [4] While traveling on the Shinkansen, Yokoi supposedly saw a bored businessman playing with an LCD calculator by pressing the buttons. Yokoi then got the idea for a watch that doubled as a ...