keithmaxx
keithmaxx
keithmaxx

They're looking for people who can correctly do commonplace things.

I love that pretty much every kid eventually resorts to making the toy they want out of paper when they can't get the real thing. I had so many paper gameboys I constructed back in the 90s. A child's imagination is a wonderful thing.

Nintendo, you're doing multiplatform wrong.

But you don't even know what ethnicity I am...

You like the internet, right? Why not spend your summer in camo, learning to ween yourself from it.

So the real question I have now is "is this character defined only by his sexual orientation?" Because it seems to me that being gay should really be a secondary property over his other personality traits. I don't want the character to be tossed out there as a token or a pedestal. "Look! We have a gay character!"

And the fact that this has now been upgraded to a "controversy" boggles my mind.

It makes me a little sad that this is going to be the tin can people beat on for the next few years when there are many more relevant issues in the gaming industry.

At this point, it could be seen as a bunch of rejects on a reject console...

Lets celebrate this previously-impossible occurrence.

I don't want to use the phrase "low expectations," but you should always only promise what you can deliver. Then, if you have time to make more, the people are surprised and happy.

One of the parts of Nintendo that keeps me faithful. Don't overpromisse, don't overhype, deliver in time, polished and fully working. It's sad that such things are oftenly underestimated these days.

On the third floor of Nintendo’s U.S. headquarters, next to the conference rooms named after Mario and Donkey Kong,