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Difference between revisions of "Satoru Iwata"
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'''Satoru Iwata''' (December 6, 1959 – July 11, 2015) was the fourth President and CEO of [[Nintendo]], promoted in 2002 by the previous President, [[Hiroshi Yamauchi]], before his retirement the same year<ref name="Iwata">[http://stars.ign.com/objects/958/958699_biography.html IGN: Satoru Iwata Biography]</ref>, making Iwata the first president to not be related to Yamauchi's family. Iwata was known for his contributions to the Nintendo subsidiary, [[HAL Laboratory|HAL Laboratory, Inc.]], and was attributed to the success of the [[Nintendo GameCube]], [[Wii]], [[Nintendo DS]], and the latter console's launch title, ''Brain Age''.<ref name="Iwata" /><ref name="Satoru">[http://cube.ign.com/articles/530/530986p1.html Profile: Satoru Iwata]</ref><ref>[http://www.gamespot.com/news/6185358.html Q&A Nintendo's Satoru Iwata]</ref> | '''Satoru Iwata''' (December 6, 1959 – July 11, 2015) was the fourth President and CEO of [[Nintendo]], promoted in 2002 by the previous President, [[Hiroshi Yamauchi]], before his retirement the same year<ref name="Iwata">[http://stars.ign.com/objects/958/958699_biography.html IGN: Satoru Iwata Biography]</ref>, making Iwata the first president to not be related to Yamauchi's family. Iwata was known for his contributions to the Nintendo subsidiary, [[HAL Laboratory|HAL Laboratory, Inc.]], and was attributed to the success of the [[Nintendo GameCube]], [[Wii]], [[Nintendo DS]], and the latter console's launch title, ''Brain Age''.<ref name="Iwata" /><ref name="Satoru">[http://cube.ign.com/articles/530/530986p1.html Profile: Satoru Iwata]</ref><ref>[http://www.gamespot.com/news/6185358.html Q&A Nintendo's Satoru Iwata]</ref> | ||
− | Iwata began his career while in college as a freelance programmer | + | Iwata began his career while in college as a freelance programmer and one of the original members of HAL Laboratory, and was employed full-time after he graduated, becoming a software coordinator almost one year after<ref name="Satoru"></ref>. While at HAL, he worked on the concept and design for the {{ser|EarthBound}} and {{ser|Kirby}} series of games, and eventually was promoted to president of the company in 1993 after making a deal with Hiroshi Yamauchi<ref name="Satoru"></ref>. His work at HAL carried over to his career at Nintendo as he was transferred to their main office, contributing towards titles such as ''[[Super Mario Sunshine]]'', ''[[Star Fox Adventures]]'', ''[[Metroid Prime]]'', ''[[Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem]]'', {{ga|Animal Crossing}} and ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker]]''.<ref name="Iwata"/> Finally, in May of 2002, Hiroshi Yamauchi promoted Iwata to president as his successor, and in 2013 Iwata succeeded [[Tatsumi Kimishima]] as CEO of Nintendo of America<ref>[http://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2013-04-24-iwata-becomes-ceo-of-nintendo-of-america Iwata becomes CEO of Nintendo of America]. GamesIndustrybiz. Retrieved July 13, 2015.</ref>. |
During his tenure. made cameos in a number of Nintendo games, but the most notable appearances were in ''[[WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$!]]'' where he appeared on Wario's TV and in ''[[WarioWare: Smooth Moves]]'', where he (under the name "Shop Manager Iwata") was the owner of a video game store and sold {{smw|18-Volt}} a ''Game & Watch'' for {{smw|9-Volt}}. | During his tenure. made cameos in a number of Nintendo games, but the most notable appearances were in ''[[WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$!]]'' where he appeared on Wario's TV and in ''[[WarioWare: Smooth Moves]]'', where he (under the name "Shop Manager Iwata") was the owner of a video game store and sold {{smw|18-Volt}} a ''Game & Watch'' for {{smw|9-Volt}}. |
Revision as of 18:17, 17 July 2015
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Satoru Iwata (December 6, 1959 – July 11, 2015) was the fourth President and CEO of Nintendo, promoted in 2002 by the previous President, Hiroshi Yamauchi, before his retirement the same year[1], making Iwata the first president to not be related to Yamauchi's family. Iwata was known for his contributions to the Nintendo subsidiary, HAL Laboratory, Inc., and was attributed to the success of the Nintendo GameCube, Wii, Nintendo DS, and the latter console's launch title, Brain Age.[1][2][3]
Iwata began his career while in college as a freelance programmer and one of the original members of HAL Laboratory, and was employed full-time after he graduated, becoming a software coordinator almost one year after[2]. While at HAL, he worked on the concept and design for the EarthBound and Kirby series of games, and eventually was promoted to president of the company in 1993 after making a deal with Hiroshi Yamauchi[2]. His work at HAL carried over to his career at Nintendo as he was transferred to their main office, contributing towards titles such as Super Mario Sunshine, Star Fox Adventures, Metroid Prime, Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem, Animal Crossing and The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker.[1] Finally, in May of 2002, Hiroshi Yamauchi promoted Iwata to president as his successor, and in 2013 Iwata succeeded Tatsumi Kimishima as CEO of Nintendo of America[4].
During his tenure. made cameos in a number of Nintendo games, but the most notable appearances were in WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! where he appeared on Wario's TV and in WarioWare: Smooth Moves, where he (under the name "Shop Manager Iwata") was the owner of a video game store and sold 18-Volt a Game & Watch for 9-Volt.
In 2014, Nintendo announced that Iwata did not attend E3 2014 due to a recent surgery to remove a tumor in his bile duct.[5] Regardless, on July 11, 2015, Iwata passed away from a bile duct growth at age 55.[6]
Works published by Nintendo
Note that as a president of Nintendo, Satoru Iwata was automatically credited as "Executive Producer" in any Nintendo-published games since his promotion. As such, this list will only encompass any games released before his promotion.
Game | Year | Console | Role / credit |
---|---|---|---|
Pinball | 1984 | Famicom / NES | Programmer (uncredited) |
F-1 Race | 1984 | Famicom / NES | Programmer (uncredited) |
Balloon Fight | 1985 | Famicom / NES | Programmer (uncredited) |
Family Computer Golf: U.S. Course | 1987 | Famicom | Programmer |
Family Computer Golf: Japan Course | 1987 | Famicom | Programmer |
Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally | 1988 | Famicom | Programmer (as "Wahyo Iwata") |
NES Open Tournament Golf | 1991 | NES | Chief Programmer |
Kirby's Dream Land | 1992 | Game Boy | Programmer (uncredited) |
NCAA Basketball | 1992 | SNES | Additional Programming |
Kirby's Pinball Land | 1993 | Game Boy | Staff |
Kirby's Adventure | 1993 | NES | Producer |
EarthBound | 1994 | SNES | Program Director |
Kirby's Dream Course | 1994 | SNES | Producer |
Vegas Stakes | 1995 | Game Boy | Executive Producer |
Kirby's Dream Land 2 | 1995 | Game Boy | Producer |
Pokémon Red and Blue | 1996 | Game Boy | Special Thanks (US version) |
Kirby Super Star | 1996 | SNES | Producer |
Kirby's Dream Land 3 | 1997 | SNES | Chief Producer |
Kirby's Star Stacker | 1998 | Super Famicom | Chief Producer |
Hey You, Pikachu! | 1998 | Nintendo 64 | Special Thanks |
Super Smash Bros. | 1999 | Nintendo 64 | Producer |
Pokémon Stadium | 1999 | Nintendo 64 | Producer |
Pokémon Snap | 1999 | Nintendo 64 | Producer |
Pokémon Gold and Silver | 1999 | Game Boy Color | Special Thanks (US version) |
Pokémon Stadium 2 | 2000 | Nintendo 64 | Producer |
Pokémon Puzzle League | 2000 | Nintendo 64 | Special Thanks |
Pokémon Crystal | 2000 | Game Boy Color | Producer |
Kirby Tilt 'n' Tumble | 2000 | Game Boy Color | Special Thanks |
Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards | 2000 | Nintendo 64 | Supervisor |
Super Smash Bros. Melee | 2001 | Nintendo GameCube | Special Thanks |
Pokémon Puzzle Collection | 2001 | Game Boy Advance | Producer |
Pokémon Pinball mini | 2001 | Pokémon Mini | Producer |
External links
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 IGN: Satoru Iwata Biography
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Profile: Satoru Iwata
- ↑ Q&A Nintendo's Satoru Iwata
- ↑ Iwata becomes CEO of Nintendo of America. GamesIndustrybiz. Retrieved July 13, 2015.
- ↑ Nintendo CEO Satoru Iwata missed E3 because he had a tumor. Geek.com. Retrieved July 13, 2015.
- ↑ Notification of Death and Personnel Change of a Representative Director (President)