It looks like Nintendo isn't making a miniature Nintendo 64 console after all
Sorry, fellow millennials: It looks like a miniature version of our generation's iconic Nintendo console, the Nintendo 64, may never come to pass.
That's according to the president of Nintendo of America, Reggie Fils-Aimé. "That’s not in our planning horizon," he told Kotaku in a recent interview. Notably, he couched his response with the preface, "I would not ever rule something out."
That's a pretty big surprise, given the overwhelming success of Nintendo's two miniature "Classic Edition" consoles — the NES Classic Edition and the Super NES Classic Edition. Both consoles re-create the look of the original game consoles, albeit in a smaller size, and pack in a bunch of classic games.
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More than just a logical conclusion, the idea of a Nintendo 64 Classic Edition first popped up in trademark filings from Nintendo itself.
In the filing, a distinctive image is shown:
The trademark image isn't just notable because it's the outline of the Nintendo 64 gamepad — it's notable because it's the same outline of a gamepad that appears on the retail branding of Nintendo's other "Classic Edition" consoles.
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For example:
That silhouette of the NES Classic Edition gamepad on the top of the box? It's identical to another trademark filing image from Nintendo:
This close-up really highlights how similar the image is:
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Nintendo filed the same logo trademark in Europe for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System gamepad silhouette, and that same silhouette appears on top of the Super NES Classic Edition box.
Thus, the logical conclusion was that Nintendo was working on a miniaturized Nintendo 64. But it's been a few months since that trademark popped up, and Nintendo has yet to announce a Nintendo 64 Classic Edition.
And now, Fils-Aimé says that such a console is unlikely — a measure of Nintendo's business calculations around the "Classic Edition" line.
"For us, these were limited time opportunities that were a way for us as a business to bridge from the conclusion of Wii U as a hardware system to the launch of Nintendo Switch. That was the very strategic reason we launched the NES Classic system," Fils-Aimé said.
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More clearly: The NES and Super NES Classic Edition consoles were created to keep money coming in while Nintendo transitioned from the Wii U (which bombed) to the Switch (which is a resounding success). And now that's Nintendo's doing well again, the need for more Classic Edition consoles may no longer exist.
It's a major bummer of an explanation that seemingly ignores the massive consumer interest in Nintendo's classic games library, but it's a logical decision for a company that's regained its foothold in the ever-finicky video game hardware business.
Regardless, if you were holding your breath for the Nintendo 64 Classic Edition, it may be time to exhale.
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