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Saturday, July 31, 2010

How Megaman 9 Resembles…Real Life?

[Many of you haven't had a chance to see this.  I've been hard at work on my new book for students, and so for this week I'm reproducing an article of mine that ran on Gamasutra a while back.  Enjoy!]

Thmagic of the title therefore is not what is new and fresh, but rather a walk down memory lane for those of us who struggled alongside Megaman during a more innocent time in our lives. Fans of the Megaman series, including myself, have felt bright smiles appear on our faces as the game transports us back to our childhood. Capcom did everything they could to make sure that the game was a faithful sequel, so that if you could go back in time and release it amidst the other Megaman games, no one would notice anything strange.
But there is something fascinating about a game company releasing a title made for a different time; it provides a snapshot of how games as a form of entertainment have changed through the last twenty years. Obviously changes in graphics and sound technology have come about, and these are readily identifiable. Latent changes and trends in our industry, however, lie revealed in the design choices of the game. Megaman 9 is a kind of time capsule, a blast from the past, and in playing it, you can’t help but feel that even beyond the large pixels and bleeps and bloops, the game layout and design itself result in a gameplay experience that is almost extinct.
Unreasonably difficult and the risk of time
When picking up Megaman 9, almost all players notice something almost immediately: The game is unreasonably difficult.
The feeling that many players and reviewers have expressed, that the game is too hard, comes from the lens of our current industry. As interactive entertainment grew and expanded, our industry has become a place where games are targeted at the mass market, tuned for a perfect challenge ramp, and sculpted to provide the most entertaining experience possible.
Megaman 9 refrains from this philosophy; the game is notoriously unforgiving. Each stage consists of only two save points, a mid point and right before the boss. Thus, if you happen to die when you are 49% of the way through the stage, which is a 10 minute experience at minimum, then you are yanked all the way back to start.
This is unheard of among games nowadays. No developer with sales in mind would punish Megaman so ruthlessly, because players would simply decide the game wasn’t worth their time, turn off the system, and go on with their lives. To entice players of today, who are short on time and have even shorter on attention spans, positive feedback and progress must be much more frequently communicated than once every few hours.
Recently, after successfully jumping and shooting my way through one of the stages over the course of a full sixty minutes, I arrived at the boss, the final enemy. On my way to his room I had managed to lose all of my extra lives, and so as I fought him, I knew that it was all on the line. For about thirty seconds or so the fight raged on; I was doing my best to recognize his pattern and avoid his attacks while sneaking in a few shots of my own. It seemed like a normal gaming experience until I noticed something odd: my heart was almost pounding right out of my chest. My hands were shaking and my palms were sweaty, and I had even stifled my breath.
Why was this happening? Why was I, an adult far removed from my childhood world, so nervous and invested in this game? The reason was that if I was unsuccessful in the battle, if this robot master defeated Megaman, then I was going to have to replay the entire stage all over again. An entire hour of play, try after try after try, would be flushed down the drain. Unless I came away with a victory, I might as well have not played the game at all, it seemed. But if I did win…then I was victorious! All of my work would be rewarded, and I would not have to replay the stage. It would be done, completed, defeated by Megaman. With such high stakes, the battle was as epic as ever. Even though I was only watching tiny pixels dance around on my television, I was as emotional as when my high school tennis team was playing in the district finals.
Within another 30 seconds, I fired a final shot, and the boss was defeated. I let out a yell as a wave of triumph washed over me and I slumped back into my futon, a silly grin plastered on my face.
What struck me was that this was a collection of sensations that I hadn’t felt since I was a child, a realization which made me think how much games have changed. By being bold enough to make a game of such intensity, the developers of Megaman 9 tapped into an emotional reservoir that allowed for such memorable gameplay. Since a loss in the game held the real life consequences of requiring me to play through the stage again, our goals became one. Megaman’s potential death carried with it not just a fictional weight, but a real cost to my personal life, and thus a victory carried with it a true emotional reward. It was a temporary marriage of the world of Megaman and reality.
However, this level of challenge comes with a price. Because the learning curve is so steep, those who aren’t willing to risk the time, perhaps the many who don’t have a childhood attachment to Megaman, miss out on the experience. By choosing to make the game so difficult, the developers rewarded a few but alienated many. This is the reason that Megaman 9 stands in such stark contrast to the games of today. Emotional investment or not, what matters to a for-profit game company is the number of SKUs a title has sold, and most players simply will not survive without more frequent sips of positive feedback and some signs marked “well done”.
A lesson in persistence
Megaman 9’s difficulty and subsequent capability for emotional investment brings with it another broader life lesson. At the time of this article’s writing I’ve beaten about six of the eight robot masters, over the course of about a month. In half hour increments, I’d suspect I’ve invested about six or seven hours into the game. But today when I went to go load my game, I glanced at the “playtime elapsed” statistic, and was puzzled. Instead of six or seven hours, the clock only read about 55 minutes, just under an hour.
At first I was perplexed by this, since I had surely played the game much more than that. But I quickly understood what was going on. This playtime statistic didn’t represent all of the times I’d played the game, it only represented the time accumulated after I saved the game. And unless I had completed a stage, there was no reason to save the game. All of those hours I had spent playing a stage three quarters of the way through before quitting were not recorded. As far as the game was concerned, I had made no progress.
Since the game is incredibly hard, you may play the game for hours before you receive the positive feedback of completing a stage. So what’s happening during all of those hours? If the game thought it only took me an hour to run through six stages, what was going on during the other five hours I had spent getting 90% of the way through each stage before colliding with a spike? Were they simply a waste of time? If I played through to a robot master and was defeated, then was my struggle for naught?
The answer to this question depends on the outlook of the player and how they choose to assess the “Game Over” screen. Stanford Professor Carol Dweck has researched the mindsets of children and adults alike for decades, and her studies have resulted in a dichotomy of two distinct worldviews.
The first and more common is the Fixed Mentality, the belief that one’s skills and lot in life are constant and unchanging. People who subscribe to this mentality are more likely to give up in the face of adversity (or in the case of Megaman, the inability to complete a stage). They see their efforts that end in Megaman’s death as fruitless, and become frustrated by the game.
The second mindset is called the Growth Mentality, which is where a person believes that their skills are constantly improving as a result of their actions. When they see a challenge, then they persist, because they believe that through effort they will eventually master it. When they are presented with the “Game Over” screen, then they don’t see a waste of time, instead they reflect on the learning experience that their previous playthrough has given them.
“Experience is what you get when you don’t get what you want,” goes the old adage. In Megaman 9, the player obviously wants to clear the stage. However, if the player goes through the stage and then dies right before completing it, the Growth Mindset dictates that they have not truly wasted their time. They have learned a great deal on their journey, and this knowledge will serve them better next time. They have learned that it takes three shots to defeat the springy robots. They’ve learned that there are spikes coming up at the next screen, and they had better move left if they want to survive. They have learned that it’s best to run full speed through the deluge of bullets instead of trying to tiptoe.
All of this information, gained through painful trial and error, is valuable. While some players may view death as a failure, others will watch Megaman explode into a million bits and say, “Well, that’s okay. I know not to do that next time.” Thus, almost every time the player dies, they are actually making progress. Their reflexes are getting faster, they’re learning and memorizing the stage, and they’re finding the best route through it.
Player driven vs. game driven feedback
The difference between Megaman 9 and other games today is the pacing of the positive feedback that the game imparts on the player, and this pacing decision affects where the feedback originates from. If you listen to the death sound effect that plays every time Megaman runs out of health, the game is communicating that the player failed. And indeed, according to the bits and bytes stored on the hard drive, the player has made no progress. Other present day games would not dare be so ruthless. They would encourage the player, either by stamping that they played the game that day at all (as in Brain Age), charting their progress against themselves instead of the game (Wii Sports), or allow them to save more often, breaking their triumphs into smaller increments (the Half Life series).
But interestingly, the difficulty of Megaman 9 demands that the player keep track of their progress themselves.
In order for a player to be successful at any challenge that gives little positive feedback, one of two items is required. The first is readily available to many children but not many adults: the luxury of time. When players enjoyed the old Megaman games, the fact that they were so difficult was not a problem, because we could wake up, play the game until school, come home from school, and play until bedtime. Day in and day out, we knew the game would be beaten eventually.
However, when an abundance of time is not available, then another attribute must be present for a person to be successful and enjoy the journey: player driven feedback, which is born out of a player’s Growth Mindset. People of all ages become frustrated when they sense they are making no progress. But if they believe that progress is being made internally, that they are learning from their failures, then they encourage themselves to continue pressing on.
After playing the game, I came to develop this outlook towards it, and it has made the game very enjoyable to me, even though I am not one who enjoys difficult games in my adult life. I would often go over to other friends’ homes and notice that they would also have downloaded Megaman 9, which I would pick up and play.
It didn’t matter that my save file wasn’t on their console, because the experience I was gaining wasn’t stored on their hard disk, it was stored within me. As I learned to navigate Galaxy Man’s stage on my friend’s Xbox, I didn’t view it as a loss that I couldn’t save my progress, because the next time I picked up the game on my Wii, that experience would show through as I would go even further than before. When I played through Splash Woman’s stage before going to sleep, only to die right at the end and be presented with a “Game Over” screen, I wasn’t discouraged, because I knew that the next time I played her stage I would likely win. By believing that I was making progress within myself, despite the absence of positive feedback from the game, my eventual victory was assured.
The difficulty curve of life
The difficulty curves in real life are more similar to Megaman 9 than today’s games, and to be successful they also require internal positive feedback. In reality, achievement is not recognized until a massive performance has been completed. Students don’t receive points for memorizing a single vocabulary word; they only receive a grade that assesses their familiarity with a collection of 100 words. Tennis players don’t hear a pleasant “Nice shot!” after they hit a good forehand at tennis practice, they only are congratulated after winning an entire match. Employees don’t receive a smiley face sticker every time they contribute to their project; they only receive a single pat on the back from their yearly performance evaluations.
In the same way, players of Megaman 9 aren’t rewarded along the way, but only after completing an entire stage, the result of hours of struggle. To reach that accomplishment, the positive feedback must be generated by the player, not the environment.
Of course, being successful in Megaman 9 does not necessarily translate to success in life. But the lessons from the game design of years past sing the same tune. The lack of well tuned positive feedback in a game environment evokes a different play experience with different requirements for success. Learning to create positive feedback and encouragement from yourself and deciding to view every failure as a learning opportunity applies to both Magma Man’s fortress as well as one’s real life career.
It may take me until New Years, but I’m coming for you, Wily!

Though it’s been out for a few months, I only recently downloaded Capcom’s Megaman 9, an anomaly among other recent game releases. It is the latest offering in the classic Megaman series, whose heyday was in the late 80’s and early 90’s. But while other sequels of cherished franchises do everything in their power to take advantage of the newest technology available, going places that the old games were not capable of going, Megaman 9 has done the opposite. Instead of targeting a new generation of players, Capcom has sought now adult players of the old games by painstakingly emulating every graphical restriction, sound channel limit, and level design choice as it would have occurred on the original Nintendo Entertainment System, and the result is an entirely new game that appears as though it belongs in the 1980’s.

The magic of the title therefore is not what is new and fresh, but rather a walk down memory lane for those of us who struggled alongside Megaman during a more innocent time in our lives. Fans of the Megaman series, including myself, have felt bright smiles appear on our faces as the game transports us back to our childhood. Capcom did everything they could to make sure that the game was a faithful sequel, so that if you could go back in time and release it amidst the other Megaman games, no one would notice anything strange.

But there is something fascinating about a game company releasing a title made for a different time; it provides a snapshot of how games as a form of entertainment have changed through the last twenty years. Obviously changes in graphics and sound technology have come about, and these are readily identifiable. Latent changes and trends in our industry, however, lie revealed in the design choices of the game. Megaman 9 is a kind of time capsule, a blast from the past, and in playing it, you can’t help but feel that even beyond the large pixels and bleeps and bloops, the game layout and design itself result in a gameplay experience that is almost extinct.

Unreasonably difficult and the risk of time

When picking up Megaman 9, almost all players notice something almost immediately: The game is unreasonably difficult.

The feeling that many players and reviewers have expressed, that the game is too hard, comes from the lens of our current industry. As interactive entertainment grew and expanded, our industry has become a place where games are targeted at the mass market, tuned for a perfect challenge ramp, and sculpted to provide the most entertaining experience possible.

Megaman 9 refrains from this philosophy; the game is notoriously unforgiving. Each stage consists of only two save points, a mid point and right before the boss. Thus, if you happen to die when you are 49% of the way through the stage, which is a 10 minute experience at minimum, then you are yanked all the way back to start.

This is unheard of among games nowadays. No developer with sales in mind would punish Megaman so ruthlessly, because players would simply decide the game wasn’t worth their time, turn off the system, and go on with their lives. To entice players of today, who are short on time and have even shorter on attention spans, positive feedback and progress must be much more frequently communicated than once every few hours.

Recently, after successfully jumping and shooting my way through one of the stages over the course of a full sixty minutes, I arrived at the boss, the final enemy. On my way to his room I had managed to lose all of my extra lives, and so as I fought him, I knew that it was all on the line. For about thirty seconds or so the fight raged on; I was doing my best to recognize his pattern and avoid his attacks while sneaking in a few shots of my own. It seemed like a normal gaming experience until I noticed something odd: my heart was almost pounding right out of my chest. My hands were shaking and my palms were sweaty, and I had even stifled my breath.

Why was this happening? Why was I, an adult far removed from my childhood world, so nervous and invested in this game? The reason was that if I was unsuccessful in the battle, if this robot master defeated Megaman, then I was going to have to replay the entire stage all over again. An entire hour of play, try after try after try, would be flushed down the drain. Unless I came away with a victory, I might as well have not played the game at all, it seemed. But if I did win…then I was victorious! All of my work would be rewarded, and I would not have to replay the stage. It would be done, completed, defeated by Megaman. With such high stakes, the battle was as epic as ever. Even though I was only watching tiny pixels dance around on my television, I was as emotional as when my high school tennis team was playing in the district finals.

Within another 30 seconds, I fired a final shot, and the boss was defeated. I let out a yell as a wave of triumph washed over me and I slumped back into my futon, a silly grin plastered on my face.

What struck me was that this was a collection of sensations that I hadn’t felt since I was a child, a realization which made me think how much games have changed. By being bold enough to make a game of such intensity, the developers of Megaman 9 tapped into an emotional reservoir that allowed for such memorable gameplay. Since a loss in the game held the real life consequences of requiring me to play through the stage again, our goals became one. Megaman’s potential death carried with it not just a fictional weight, but a real cost to my personal life, and thus a victory carried with it a true emotional reward. It was a temporary marriage of the world of Megaman and reality.

However, this level of challenge comes with a price. Because the learning curve is so steep, those who aren’t willing to risk the time, perhaps the many who don’t have a childhood attachment to Megaman, miss out on the experience. By choosing to make the game so difficult, the developers rewarded a few but alienated many. This is the reason that Megaman 9 stands in such stark contrast to the games of today. Emotional investment or not, what matters to a for-profit game company is the number of SKUs a title has sold, and most players simply will not survive without more frequent sips of positive feedback and some signs marked “well done”.

A lesson in persistence

Megaman 9’s difficulty and subsequent capability for emotional investment brings with it another broader life lesson. At the time of this article’s writing I’ve beaten about six of the eight robot masters, over the course of about a month. In half hour increments, I’d suspect I’ve invested about six or seven hours into the game. But today when I went to go load my game, I glanced at the “playtime elapsed” statistic, and was puzzled. Instead of six or seven hours, the clock only read about 55 minutes, just under an hour.

At first I was perplexed by this, since I had surely played the game much more than that. But I quickly understood what was going on. This playtime statistic didn’t represent all of the times I’d played the game, it only represented the time accumulated after I saved the game. And unless I had completed a stage, there was no reason to save the game. All of those hours I had spent playing a stage three quarters of the way through before quitting were not recorded. As far as the game was concerned, I had made no progress.

Since the game is incredibly hard, you may play the game for hours before you receive the positive feedback of completing a stage. So what’s happening during all of those hours? If the game thought it only took me an hour to run through six stages, what was going on during the other five hours I had spent getting 90% of the way through each stage before colliding with a spike? Were they simply a waste of time? If I played through to a robot master and was defeated, then was my struggle for naught?

The answer to this question depends on the outlook of the player and how they choose to assess the “Game Over” screen. Stanford Professor Carol Dweck has researched the mindsets of children and adults alike for decades, and her studies have resulted in a dichotomy of two distinct worldviews.

The first and more common is the Fixed Mentality, the belief that one’s skills and lot in life are constant and unchanging. People who subscribe to this mentality are more likely to give up in the face of adversity (or in the case of Megaman, the inability to complete a stage). They see their efforts that end in Megaman’s death as fruitless, and become frustrated by the game.

The second mindset is called the Growth Mentality, which is where a person believes that their skills are constantly improving as a result of their actions. When they see a challenge, then they persist, because they believe that through effort they will eventually master it. When they are presented with the “Game Over” screen, then they don’t see a waste of time, instead they reflect on the learning experience that their previous playthrough has given them.

“Experience is what you get when you don’t get what you want,” goes the old adage. In Megaman 9, the player obviously wants to clear the stage. However, if the player goes through the stage and then dies right before completing it, the Growth Mindset dictates that they have not truly wasted their time. They have learned a great deal on their journey, and this knowledge will serve them better next time. They have learned that it takes three shots to defeat the springy robots. They’ve learned that there are spikes coming up at the next screen, and they had better move left if they want to survive. They have learned that it’s best to run full speed through the deluge of bullets instead of trying to tiptoe.

All of this information, gained through painful trial and error, is valuable. While some players may view death as a failure, others will watch Megaman explode into a million bits and say, “Well, that’s okay. I know not to do that next time.” Thus, almost every time the player dies, they are actually making progress. Their reflexes are getting faster, they’re learning and memorizing the stage, and they’re finding the best route through it.

Player driven vs. game driven feedback

The difference between Megaman 9 and other games today is the pacing of the positive feedback that the game imparts on the player, and this pacing decision affects where the feedback originates from. If you listen to the death sound effect that plays every time Megaman runs out of health, the game is communicating that the player failed. And indeed, according to the bits and bytes stored on the hard drive, the player has made no progress. Other present day games would not dare be so ruthless. They would encourage the player, either by stamping that they played the game that day at all (as in Brain Age), charting their progress against themselves instead of the game (Wii Sports), or allow them to save more often, breaking their triumphs into smaller increments (the Half Life series).

But interestingly, the difficulty of Megaman 9 demands that the player keep track of their progress themselves.

In order for a player to be successful at any challenge that gives little positive feedback, one of two items is required. The first is readily available to many children but not many adults: the luxury of time. When players enjoyed the old Megaman games, the fact that they were so difficult was not a problem, because we could wake up, play the game until school, come home from school, and play until bedtime. Day in and day out, we knew the game would be beaten eventually.

However, when an abundance of time is not available, then another attribute must be present for a person to be successful and enjoy the journey: player driven feedback, which is born out of a player’s Growth Mindset. People of all ages become frustrated when they sense they are making no progress. But if they believe that progress is being made internally, that they are learning from their failures, then they encourage themselves to continue pressing on.

After playing the game, I came to develop this outlook towards it, and it has made the game very enjoyable to me, even though I am not one who enjoys difficult games in my adult life. I would often go over to other friends’ homes and notice that they would also have downloaded Megaman 9, which I would pick up and play.

It didn’t matter that my save file wasn’t on their console, because the experience I was gaining wasn’t stored on their hard disk, it was stored within me. As I learned to navigate Galaxy Man’s stage on my friend’s Xbox, I didn’t view it as a loss that I couldn’t save my progress, because the next time I picked up the game on my Wii, that experience would show through as I would go even further than before. When I played through Splash Woman’s stage before going to sleep, only to die right at the end and be presented with a “Game Over” screen, I wasn’t discouraged, because I knew that the next time I played her stage I would likely win. By believing that I was making progress within myself, despite the absence of positive feedback from the game, my eventual victory was assured.

The difficulty curve of life

The difficulty curves in real life are more similar to Megaman 9 than today’s games, and to be successful they also require internal positive feedback. In reality, achievement is not recognized until a massive performance has been completed. Students don’t receive points for memorizing a single vocabulary word; they only receive a grade that assesses their familiarity with a collection of 100 words. Tennis players don’t hear a pleasant “Nice shot!” after they hit a good forehand at tennis practice, they only are congratulated after winning an entire match. Employees don’t receive a smiley face sticker every time they contribute to their project; they only receive a single pat on the back from their yearly performance evaluations.

In the same way, players of Megaman 9 aren’t rewarded along the way, but only after completing an entire stage, the result of hours of struggle. To reach that accomplishment, the positive feedback must be generated by the player, not the environment.

Of course, being successful in Megaman 9 does not necessarily translate to success in life. But the lessons from the game design of years past sing the same tune. The lack of well tuned positive feedback in a game environment evokes a different play experience with different requirements for success. Learning to create positive feedback and encouragement from yourself and deciding to view every failure as a learning opportunity applies to both Magma Man’s fortress as well as one’s real life career.

It may take me until New Years, but I’m coming for you, Wily!

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Comments

9 Responses to “How Megaman 9 Resembles…Real Life?”
  1. Max says:

    I totally cried a little bit reading this article.

  2. James says:

    The original Zuma had a terribly sharp difficulty curve. It probably looked something like an unbound exponential function.

    Before Zuma, games from PopCap were endless. Infinite levels that also had exponential difficulty curves. Zuma levels couldn’t be randomly generated, so the difficulty was generated in such a way to mimic the previous design paradigm. It’s estimated that less than 10% of people who bought Zuma actually beat the game!

    Now, fast forward 7 years or so and you have an evolution in game design. There’s no infinitely hard level progression: people play to beat the game. Consequently, Zuma’s Revenge has a lot more forgiving difficulty curve on the story mode. What about the hard core players? Hero Mode! Those 10% of people from the first game? Iron Frog!

    What’s that? You want replay value without a sharp difficulty curve? Try the Challenges!

    There are a lot more ways to add replay value to a game compared to 10 years ago.

    MegaMan (and Sonic) are from an era where video games could be at max 4 hours long. The cartridge limited the game! How do you add replay value? Ramp up the difficulty!

  3. Matt S. says:

    wow…so enlightening. i’m 29, been married for three years, no kids, and play video games almost everyday. i have friends who have children and they say that video games make children more anti-social, but i always counter that growing up playing difficult nes games has made me more tenacious and diligent. hard work certainly is rewarding whether you apply it to gaming or studying for an exam. never give up.

    years ago when i was dating my wife during college, she lost her cell phone in the a huge snow storm. she desperately looked for it, but gave up quickly because the piles of snow was so daunting. she came to me and i used my cell phone to call hers, but all it would do it keep ringing. she said it was pointless, yet i reasoned that because it was still ringing, it was not dead, and if someone had stolen it, they would have turned it off. so it must still be in the snow. she reluctantly followed me and we retraced her steps for about three blocks before we heard her ring tone. it so happens that her friend had tackled her in the snow and her phone came out of her pocket. she was so happy, and i got bonus points for being so loving.

    the point of my story is that i didn’t give up because of my “never give up” attitude that i’ve gained from years of gaming.

  4. Brice says:

    Matt, very true! It is interesting how challenges of persistence can show up anywhere. It’s good that you’ve been able to apply it to other areas of your life; thanks for sharing!

  5. Andrew J says:

    I’m 23 and for a while I’ve been puzzled about why I now prefer games that didn’t take 60 hours to beat, games without dauntingly hard tasks, games without tons of management involved. When I was younger I was always playing the same starting levels in Mario, Sonic, Megaman, and Ninja Gaiden and it wasn’t a problem to me. It was never about finishing the game like it is when I play games nowadays. This article has shed some light in a possible explanation to this phenomenon.

    I’m curious of what you think about Demon Soul’s for the PS3. I watched my friend play that game for hours on end into the wee hours of the night only to have never beaten a single level or even advance to any sort of checkpoint. He fought the same couple monsters over and over again, progressively getting better but never getting far enough to get positive feedback from the game.

  6. Brice says:

    @Andrew – I haven’t played Demon Souls, but it seems to be a much more hardcore version of this same concept.

  7. Remy77077 says:

    Just thought I’d let you know I loved this article and referenced this in my own article along similar lines about Splosion Man… another “old school” design platformer in a way. :)

    http://agoners.wordpress.com/2010/06/13/is-splosion-man-challenging-or-punishing/

  8. Thais Weiller says:

    Great article. Since you seems to enjoy academic theories realated to video games, let me add another one. Your descripition of playing Megamen 9 resambles the concept of Flow created by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi; a chalenging activity that “makes” the individual to continue by pleasure.

    By the way, Csikszentmihalyi was Nintendo consultant for a while… ahahah

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