Miyamoto: I'm healthy and don't plan to retire any time soon
But admits he would like to spend more time on small ideas.
Nintendo developer legend Shigeru Miyamoto is fit and healthy and does not plan to retire any time soon, he has declared.
The 59-year-old's comments, made in an interview with the Wall Street Journal yesterday, come after he told Wired he was retiring from his current position at Nintendo to focus on small scale video game development.
The Wired article sparked concern over Nintendo's future, and was linked to a two per cent drop in the Japanese company's share price.
The Wall Street Journal interview appears as a counter to that piece, and states Nintendo has created "organisational structures and a culture it thinks will be able to infuse his [Miyamoto's] type of thoughtful yet fun designs into its products long after he is gone". But, "he is very healthy and isn't planning to retire any time soon."
""We have to construct the structure of the organization so that it can make it without me," Miyamoto said.
"I should also admit that it might be better without me; I mean that a different approach and different talent might emerge, though I shouldn't dwell on this because then the article might indeed say 'Mr. Miyamoto is thinking about retiring,' because that is not the case."
Echoing his Wired comments, Miyamoto told the WSJ he would like to focus more time on small ideas, but qualified this by saying they could blossom into bigger games as time goes on.
After the publication of the Wired article Nintendo issued a statement insisting Miyamoto had no intention of stepping down.
"Shigeru Miyamoto's role at Nintendo is not changing," Nintendo said. "He will continue to be a driving force in Nintendo's development efforts. In discussing his priorities at Nintendo in a media interview, Mr. Miyamoto explained how he is encouraging the younger developers at the company to take more initiative and responsibility for developing software.
"He attempted to convey his priorities moving forward, inclusive of overseeing all video game development and ensuring the quality of all products. Mr. Miyamoto also discussed his desire to pursue fresh ideas and experiences of the kind that sparked his initial interest in video games."
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Comments (15) Latest comment 6 months ago
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Either way, Nintendo would be stupid to not let Miyamoto make some smaller games or think of a new franchise. Sure, nurture the new talent - that is seriously important in any business and any industry wherever you are. But don't neglect the talent you have - and one look at the games Miyamoto has been involved with will tell you that Nintendo has no bigger talent than Miyamoto.
It's an absolute no-brainer, surely?
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So quite frankly I don't blame him, it's where his passions lie!
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Whatever the future holds, Nintendo must know the minute Miyamoto retires or, sadly, departs from our earthly realm to go to a place such godly men must go (because it's clearly a different universe to ours), Nintendo will be in real trouble. I think this was damage control - but for good reason. If the stock hadn't crashed like that, they'd have let it go. But the minute he said the word "retire", and the market reacted, Nintendo must have realised - Miyamoto is Nintendo these days. That kind of reaction isn't done lightly, and to the market, losing Miyamoto would be the kiss of death.
And that must alarm Nintendo more than anything - more than the Vita, more than a next-gen, more than anything possible in the world ever. Their whole company right now seems to hinge on Miyamoto and what he wants to do.
And that - afraid to say it - is a little bit scary. Miyamoto is 59. He's not getting any younger...
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@kingmancheng; Indeed, Miyamoto is, at heart, a games maker. He has made, produced, directed and designed literally everything Nintendo has ever done right (and a little bit of what third parties got right too - Killer Instinct and Eternal Darkness he had his hands in as well...). That's why the share price dropped... it's a bit like China. "F**k... he like... makes everything..."
Not to make a political point out of this, but DESIGN and INVENTION is not the same as MANUFACTURING (all under "make"
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It's a lot of power to put on the shoulders of one man is my point - and that should trouble Nintendo somewhat. The drop in share prices is enough of a warning shot to remind them what they've got... and more importantly, what they have to lose...
Anyway, sorry about the cheap joke. It was a pretty bad one. I will now waterboard myself for your amusement...
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It seems to happen a lot, with one set of quotes having multiple interpretations on multiple sites.
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You know it actually does sound a bit like that.
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