Under Maintenance
We deeply apologize for interrupting your reading but Vendetta is currently undergoing some important maintenance! You may experience some layout shifts, slow loading times and dififculties in navigating.
Sports Media
Nintendo is still considering whether to continue its series of Mini consoles. During a Q&A with its General Meeting of Shareholders held on Tuesday, which it has published in Japanese, a shareholder suggested that the Nintendo Classic Mini series could be a new way for parents who no longer play games to indulge with the Nintendo IP again.
Nintendo president Shuntaro Furukawa replied: “We always want our products to be played by people of all ages, from children to adults. In fact, after being in the video game business for many years, we believe that there is now a very wide range of generations who have adopted Nintendo consoles.”
“We will continue to examine the possibility of offering classic content, such as with the NES and Super NES Classic Mini series, as well as our online services, as a way of communicating the appeal of our products to different generations.”
Nintendo released the NES Classic Edition – known in Europe as the Nintendo Classic Mini: NES and in Japan as the Nintendo Classic Mini: Family Computer – in November 2016, where it almost instantly sold out before being discontinued in April 2017.
Due to continued demand, it was then re-launched for another six months in June 2018.
The NES Mini contained 30 pre-loaded NES games. Including the Super Mario Bros trilogy, Zelda and Zelda II, Metroid, Kirby’s Adventure, and Final Fantasy.
Nintendo followed this up with the SNES Classic Edition – known in Europe and Japan as the Nintendo Classic Mini: SNES and Nintendo Classic Mini: Super Famicom respectively – which featured 21 pre-loaded SNES games, including the first-ever official release of Star Fox 2.
“At this place, we cannot tell new information about future classic hardware among others, but we are thinking about providing an extension of the online service which is currently providing Famicom [NES] software, as well as other methods of providing them,” he said.
“We also recognize that there are opinions wanting to play past titles.”
What do you think of this development? Which Nintendo console do you want to get the mini-console treatment next? Let us know on Twitter and Instagram and make sure to check out the Vendetta Shop on the way.
Rasmus Andersson Expresses Desire To Remain With Flames In Epic Hate-Filled Rant What are the Flames going to do with…
Triston Casas: Red Sox told me none of the trade rumors are true Red Sox first baseman Triston Casas’ name…
Report: Pistons prioritizing ‘upgrades and flexibility’ over eating cap space In today’s day-and-age, free agency in the NBA isn’t as…
UFC Vegas 101: Five Things We Learned UFC Vegas 101 is in the books. The event was the first fight…