Certainly, with hardware nowadays you can do that and we have done that, but of course nowadays creating bigger enemies takes a lot of effort." -Shigeru Miyamoto ( Shigeru Miyamoto's 'Bad' Game) The other thing, is it would have been nice to have had bigger enemies in the game, but the Famicom/NES hardware wasn't capable of doing that. But, because of the limitations on how quickly those scenes changed, we weren't able to. the overhead and kind of the interchange between the two. ↑ "I think specifically in the case of Zelda II we had a challenge just in terms of what the hardware was capable of doing, So one thing, of course, is, from a hardware perspective, if we had been able to have the switch between the scenes speed up, if that had been faster, we could have done more with how we used the sidescrolling vs.All games I make usually gets better in the development process, since good ideas keep coming, but Zelda II was sort of a failure." -Shigeru Miyamoto ( SUPER PLAY MAGAZINE INTERVIEWS SHIGERU MIYAMOTO ABOUT THE LEGEND OF ZELDA) ↑ "Compared to Legend of Zelda, Zelda II went exactly what we expected.first." -Shigeru Miyamoto ( The Legend of Zelda Developer Interview) The Legend of Zelda was for the Family Computer Disk System, so we decided to finish up Super Mario Bros. ↑ "First, we started making The Legend of Zelda, and then we started Super Mario Bros.And so it was around that time that I really began to start drawing on my experiences as a child and bringing that into game development." -Shigeru Miyamoto ( Q&A: Shigeru Miyamoto On The Origins Of Nintendo's Famous Characters) And I drew on that inspiration when we were working on the Legend of Zelda game and we were creating this grand outdoor adventure where you go through these narrowed confined spaces and come upon this great lake. We had gone on this hiking trip and climbed up the mountain, and I was so amazed - it was the first time I had ever experienced hiking up this mountain and seeing this big lake at the top. There's a place near Kobe where there's a mountain, and you climb the mountain, and there's a big lake near the top of it. When I got into the upper elementary school ages - that was when I really got into hiking and mountain climbing. And what that meant was I spent a lot of my time playing in the rice paddies and exploring the hillsides and having fun outdoors. ↑ "When I was younger, I grew up in the countryside of Japan.Miyamoto played the mandolin in The Wind Waker's title theme.The Adventure of Link is the only The Legend of Zelda game Miyamoto considers a failure, this due to the limitations of the hardware.Since then, he has worked as the producer of every game in The Legend of Zelda series. Shortly before starting development for Super Mario Bros., Miyamoto began developing The Legend of Zelda as a launch title for the Famicom Disk System. He joined Nintendo in 1977, where he began developing arcade games. He loves his current environment, as he can "engage in so many different things." He joked he'd like it to remain in a similar place, but maybe at his desk or bathtub instead.During his childhood, Miyamoto enjoyed exploring the countryside and hillsides around his home, which inspired the creation of The Legend of Zelda. On that same note, when NPR asked the director which Nintendo world he would like to live in when it's time for the afterlife, Miyamoto offered a bittersweet sentiment. So I think there won't - it's not going to change," he said. "There's always the fact that it's a new idea, but also the fact that, is it a new idea that really has the essence of Nintendo or not? And I think that's something that, you know, we have this incredible shared vision, almost a little scary shared vision, about this. Even as the company introduces new ideas, he described a Nintendo where everyone is mostly on the same page. Miyamoto chalks that outlook up to a shared understanding at Nintendo. There's, you know, people on the executive team, creators within the company, and also people who create Mario, they all have this sense of what it means to be Nintendo." "You know, I really feel it's not going to change, " Miyamoto said. When asked about a Nintendo without him, Miyamoto thinks the creators and executives still there will keep things mostly the same. In an interview with NPR, Miyamoto spoke about his inspirations, Nintendo's future, and how a shared vision at the company drives its familiar essence.
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