Nintendo representative director Shigeru Miyamoto turns 70 years old today.
As the creator of some of the most iconic and genre-defining game series of all time – including Donkey Kong, Mario, The Legend of Zelda, Star Fox and Pikmin – Miyamoto is considered one of the most successful and influential figures in the history of video games.
Miyamoto joined Nintendo in 1977 as an apprentice in the company’s planning department. As a budding artist, one of his first jobs for the company was to create the art for the 1979 arcade game Sheriff.
His first major success came, however when he designed Donkey Kong in 1981. As one of the earliest examples of the platform genre and the debut of both the titular Donkey Kong and the soon-to-be globally popular Mario, the game was hugely popular worldwide, earning $280 million in cabinet sales in the US alone in 1982.
Miyamoto would create something arguably even more groundbreaking in 1985, when he co-designed and directed Super Mario Bros for the Famicom / NES. A year later, this was followed by The Legend of Zelda, then the year after that came Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic (repurposed in Super Mario Bros 2 for the west).
He then revolutionised the platformer all over again in 1988 when he co-directed Super Mario Bros 3 with his regular design partner Takashi Tezuka.
The rest of Miyamoto’s softography in the three and a half decades that have followed consists of a list with a success rate that many game designers could only dream of.
On the SNES alone, Miyamoto produced Super Mario World, designed F-Zero, produced The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past and designed Star Fox.
He followed this on the Nintendo 64 by creating three more groundbreaking titles – directing Super Mario 64, designing
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