
If you watched the June 19 episode of WWE Monday Night Raw, you surely noticed something interesting in the crowd: A …
All the Latest Game Footage and Images from EarthBound Beginnings
EarthBound Beginnings is the first installment in the EarthBound / Mother series. It was developed by Ape Inc., Nintendo Tokyo R&D Products, and Pax Softnica, and was published by Nintendo for the Famicom on July 27, 1989. Though officially translated into English under the name EarthBound in 1990 complete with a variety of updates and new content, the planned release of the North American localization was ultimately cancelled due to Nintendo of America ending support for the Nintendo Entertainment System. Despite this, the updates made to the game for the English localization was included in the Japanese Mother 1+2 rerelease for Game Boy Advance in 2003. The English version was finally released on the Wii U Virtual Console on June 14th, 2015, 25 years after its intended release date.
If you watched the June 19 episode of WWE Monday Night Raw, you surely noticed something interesting in the crowd: A …
Another prototype of EarthBound for the NES has been discovered, this time at a garage sale in Portland, Oregon. It seems identical to the prototype found back in the 1990s. Nintendo has since released the game officially on Wii U as EarthBound Beginnings. Just goes to show you what might still be out there at garage…
In 2013, when I visited Nintendo’s Redmond HQ for a feature on the company’s Treehouse localization team, staffers…
It’s been nearly a decade since Nintendo released Mother 3 in Japan, and since then, we haven’t heard a word about…
My annual interviews with Nintendo of America boss Reggie Fils-Aime are upbeat affairs. He’s always feeling good…
Holy shit. Nintendo just announced that the first Mother game is coming to the U.S. for the first time—on the Wii…
Hearts exploded with giddy appreciation for Nintendo this week as the gamemaker announced it would be partnering…
The most common email response I received to my previous column ("Japan: It's Not Funny Anymore") was a perplexed…
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