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Life without Miyamoto

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Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Video games are relatively young in the entertainment world. It seems like in only the past several years it has finally become accepted by the mainstream masses as more than just for children – entire families are playing together.  Being so young, this industry has yet to experience the loss of one of its greats while in their prime. Imagine how music could have evolved if the plane crash that took the lives of Ritchie Valens, Buddy Holly and the Big Bopper never happened.

For many of us, the work of Shigeru Miyamoto is the sole cause of our undying love for video games. Having his hands in such a wide range of genres and genre-defining games, he is arguably the single most influential person in the industry.

Some of the innovations made in the industry that were a direct result of his efforts would have probably come to fruition at some point but we would currently be in a completely different situation otherwise. Most notably, the way we interact with games.

If it weren’t for Miyamoto’s success with Donkey Kong, Nintendo would have never made it past the decade that gave us leg warmers, parachute pants and the totally tubular Max Headroom.  With Nintendo out of the picture, they wouldn’t have redesigned and popularized the directional pad -- which is featured on every major console since the original Nintendo Entertainment System. Furthermore, we might have gone without our virtual assault rifles rumbling the controller with every shot we take as we rush the beaches of Normandy using the analog stick.  And how would those guns fire without the shoulder buttons introduced on the SNES controller?

With the recent advent of motion controllers and 3D, it could be argued that the next logical step is total immersion in the form of a virtual world like that shown in the movie Lawnmower Man. How awesome would that be; minus the horror, of course.

But none of this would be possible today if it weren’t for Miyamoto’s constant need to innovate. Heck, if the Virtual Boy had been successful we might have been playing in our own virtual reality rooms this very minute.

I know it’s a little farfetched, but a man can dream.

Now, that’s just covering the way we interact with our games. Let’s look at the kind of games we would be missing without the mind of Miyamoto.

 Shigeru Miyamoto was the first to put the importance of the story ahead of the actual programming. As a result, one thing is for sure, we would have never experienced the koopa-squishing antics of the Mario Bros. or his childhood adventures manifested into The Legend of Zelda. We would be left with nothing more than maze and shooter games, and video games would be seen as a footnote of ‘80s fads.

Classic third-party franchises that are still made today would simply seize to exist.  Castlevania, Metal Gear, Final Fantasy; all would be gone. And I think it goes without saying that we would not have experienced newer popular franchises such as Halo or God of War.

Having been honored as the first person inducted into the Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences’ Hall of Fame and most recently recognized by BAFTA at the British Academy Video Games Awards, it is clear that games would not be the same, and we would be playing them differently if it weren’t for the work of Shigeru Miyamoto.

Ultimately, it can be said that without Shigeru Miyamoto we would all have a different hobby and passion. I, personally, can’t imagine where I would be or what I would be doing if I didn’t have a video game to play at the end of the day.

What else would change if Miyamoto decided to take on a different career -- or do you feel I'm giving him too much credit? I'd love to hear your thoughts.

 
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Comments (7)
5211_100857553261324_100000112393199_12455_5449490_n
September 08, 2010

I think Miyamoto's arguably the savior of home-console gaming in an age saturated with haphazard Colecovision clones.  Would our gaming scene be vastly different without his contributions?  Absolutely.

 

It makes you wonder how things would have turned out... Look at the sad state of the dying breed of the once-proud arcades now, and imagine what it would be like if home gaming hadn't gotten a reboot.  Things could have turned out extremely different.

Headshot
September 08, 2010

It never occured to me to think of how the arcade scene would have changed. Gaming would have been more different than I had realized.

5211_100857553261324_100000112393199_12455_5449490_n
September 08, 2010

Not that I'm blaming Miyamoto for the death of Arcades!  I wouldn't have it any other way, even if he had.  It's just that he's touched so much of the gaming scene that it's hard to tell where we'd be today without him.

Bithead
September 09, 2010

I agree he's probably the most influential designer out there.  And believe you me -- I think the man's genius is worth celebrating, and the fact that he's still working and vital makes me hopeful for our industry's future.

But.  I think games would have continued to develop and innovate without him.  And I think there are many other minds at Nintendo that have helped create the many games he is often given sole credit for.  I watched his BAFTA ceremony, and that was one of the first things he said: That without all of the other people he's worked with, none of his ideas could have come to fruition.  The guy's brilliant and humble.  Love it.

So while I agree with you in part, I don't think the reality is as singular as you make it out to be. 

Headshot
September 09, 2010

I agree that Miyamoto couldn't have done it without the support from his team at Nintendo but his ideas were so personal to him specifically that gaming would be completely different without him.

I also agree with you Jon in that video games would have marched on but it probably would have had an extremely niche following.

I think the only chance it would have had at a resurgence wouldn't be until the '90s when personal computers became more prominent in the home. Which in turn might propel gaming to the forefront due to so many imaginative minds working on indie games in their garages.

But that's all speculation and I'm so glad it turned out the way it did.

Default_picture
September 09, 2010

To imagine life without Miyamoto one must imagine life without Mario and that my friends is akin upon blasphemy. Take it back before he hears you and comes to stomp on your head.

5211_100857553261324_100000112393199_12455_5449490_n
September 09, 2010

It's alright; I've got a shell.

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