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(R&D1 was established long before 1984 and that incorrect date has been removed from Wikipedia a long time. R&D1 was established in the 1970s although the exact year is unknown. I've read 1970, 1974 and a bunch of other years but they are unreliable.)
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|name=Nintendo Research & Development 1
|name=Nintendo Research & Development 1
|founded= 1970s
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|location=Japan
|founded=1970
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'''Nintendo Research and Development 1''' (R&D1) was [[Nintendo]]'s oldest development team. Its creation coincided with Nintendo's entry into the video games industry, and the original R&D1 was headed by [[Gunpei Yokoi]]. The developer has created several notable Nintendo series such as [[Metroid]], [[Ice Climber]], [[Kid Icarus]] and [[Wario Land]].
'''Nintendo Research and Development 1''' (R&D1) was [[Nintendo]]'s oldest development team. Its creation coincided with Nintendo's entry into the video games industry, and the original R&D1 was headed by [[Gunpei Yokoi]]. The developer has created several notable Nintendo series such as [[Metroid]], [[Ice Climber]], [[Kid Icarus]] and [[Wario Land]].



Revision as of 20:51, 20 March 2020

Nintendo Research & Development 1
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Nintendo Research and Development 1 (R&D1) was Nintendo's oldest development team. Its creation coincided with Nintendo's entry into the video games industry, and the original R&D1 was headed by Gunpei Yokoi. The developer has created several notable Nintendo series such as Metroid, Ice Climber, Kid Icarus and Wario Land.

In 1986, several developers left R&D1 to form Intelligent Systems, which became another first party developer for Nintendo.

R&D1 developed the hugely successful Game Boy line, which was released in 1989. They developed some of the line's most popular games, such as Super Mario Land, and created the character of Wario.

After Yokoi's resignation in 1996, the group was led by Takehiro Izushi. In 2005, Satoru Iwata restructured Nintendo's development resources and placed all of the internal software teams (including R&D1) under Entertainment Analysis and Development.[1]

Games developed

Arcade

Famicom Disk System

NES

Super NES

GameCube

iQue

Game & Watch

Game Boy

Virtual Boy

Game Boy Color

Game Boy Advance

Nintendo DS

  1. Nintendo R&D1. GameStats. Retrieved on 2007-03-23.