Culture
Games
Nintendo
Nintendo Switch
Asia Pacific
Museum features consoles from 1983’s Famicom to 2017’s Switch, as well as
honouring Nintendo’s pre-video-game era
Traditionally, visitors to Kyoto in October come for momijigari, the turning of
the autumn leaves in the city’s picturesque parks. This autumn, however, there
is a new draw: a Nintendo museum.
The new attraction, which opens on Wednesday, is best described as a chapel of
video game nostalgia. Upstairs, Nintendo’s many video game consoles, from 1983’s
Famicom through 1996’s Nintendo 64 to 2017’s Switch, are displayed reverently
alongside their most famous games. On the back wall, visitors can also peer at
toys, playing cards and other artefacts from the Japanese company’s
pre-video-game history, stretching back to its founding as a hanafuda playing
card manufacturer in 1889. Downstairs, there are interactive exhibits with
comically gigantic controllers and floor-projected playing cards.
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