Nintendo Entertainment System

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The Nintendo Entertainment System (ファミコン, Famikon, Famicom), commonly abbreviated as NES or Nintendo, was the first home gaming console manufactured by Nintendo.

The NES debuted in Japan as the Famicom (Family Computer) in 1983. After selling over 2.5 million units by the end of 1984, Nintendo decided it would bring its console to North America. They first tried negotiating with Atari to have them release it, but the deal fell through, so Nintendo decided that they would release the console themselves.

The Famicom was difficult to pitch to retailes due to the current video game market being oversaturated with poor titles and low consumer interest. After tweaking the system a few times, Nintendo finally pitched the console as the Nintendo Entertainment System and emphasized its toy-like features such as the Robot Operating Buddy (R.O.B.) and the Zapper light gun. Retailers finally began to take interest and the system debuted in test markets in New York City and Los Angeles before eventually being released all across the United States.

The NES grew to wide success, outselling all of its competitors and leading the worldwide video game market. Many NES games are considered classics today, such as Super Mario Bros., Duck Hunt, and The Legend of Zelda.

In Japan, an accessory for the Famicom was released entitled the Famicom Disk System. The Famicom Disk System featured rewritable disks that could store games and saved data. This allowed for sales of cheaper games as manufacturing a disk was much less expensive than a cartridge. Many games, such as The Legend of Zelda and Zelda II: The Adventure of Link were originally released as Disk System titles. Many of these titles would later be re-released as regular Famicom cartidges, using password saving and battery-backed memory in lieu of the disks' rewritable memory. While there were plans to release the Disk System in North America, this never happened and all Disk System games released in North America were released as regular cartridges.

Gradually, the competition began to catch up and the next generation of home consoles, such as the SEGA Genesis and Nintendo's own Super Nintendo Entertainment System, began to overtake the NES's market share. Finally, after a full decade of production, the NES was formally discontinued in the U.S. in 1995. By this time, over 60 million units and over 500 million games had been sold throughout the world.

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