Shigeru Miyamoto
Shigeru Miyamoto (宮本茂, born November 16, 1952) is a world-famous video game designer and creator, known as the man behind two of Nintendo's most well-known franchises, Super Mario and The Legend of Zelda. He has worked on hundreds of games since joining Nintendo, including being behind the initial development of the Pokémon games.
While Satoshi Tajiri had created the idea for Capsule Monsters with longtime friend Ken Sugimori, when the idea for the game was pitched to Nintendo it was rejected initially. Miyamoto, however, took interest in the idea, and over the next five years, Game Freak, alongside Creatures, Inc., another Nintendo developer, created the first Pokémon games, Pokémon Red and Green.
Miyamoto's vision for the series was a phenomenal influence, with the idea of paired versions featuring version-exclusive Pokémon being his own.[1][2] Rather than have a single game, to emphasize the trading aspects, players would have to link up with a friend to achieve the ultimate goal of catching them all. For this, the main rival of the Generation I games and their remakes has "Shigeru" on his list of default names, while his anime counterpart is directly named "Shigeru", in Miyamoto's honor.
Pokémon credits
- Pokémon Red and Blue (1996): Producer
- Pokémon Stadium (Japanese) (1998): Producer
- Pokémon Stadium (1999): Producer
- Pokémon Snap (1999): Producer
- Pokémon Stadium 2 (2000): Producer
- Pokémon Crystal (2001): Producer
- Pokémon Box Ruby & Sapphire (2003): Producer
- Pokémon Colosseum (2003): Producer
- Pokémon Channel (2003): General Producer
External links
- Shigeru Miyamoto on NintendoWiki
- Shigeru Miyamoto on Super Mario Wiki
- Shigeru Miyamoto on Zeldapedia