Hiroshi Yamauchi (山内 溥) | |
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Born | Hiroshi (Shemama) Yamauchi November 7, 1927 Kyoto |
Nationality | Japanese |
Alma mater | Waseda University (dropped out) |
Occupation | President and Chairman, Nintendo (1949-2002, 2002-2005) |
Net worth | $7.8 billion [1] |
Spouse | Michiko Inaba |
Children | 3 |
Hiroshi Yamauchi (山内 溥 Yamauchi Hiroshi , real name: 山内 博, born November 7, 1927 in Kyoto, Japan) is a Japanese businessman. He was the third president of Nintendo, joining the company in 1949 until stepping down on May 31, 2002, to be succeeded by Satoru Iwata. Yamauchi is credited with transforming Nintendo from a small hanafuda card-making company in Japan to today's multi-billion dollar video game company. He also became the majority owner of the Seattle Mariners baseball team in 1992, which is now managed by former Nintendo of America chairman Howard Lincoln.
As of 2008, Yamauchi is the third richest person in Japan and 149th richest in the world, having a net worth of approximately $7.8 billion.[2]
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Hiroshi was sent to a preparatory school in Kyoto at age twelve and had planned to study law or engineering but World War II disrupted his studies. Since he was too young to fight he was put to work in a military factory. Once the war ended in 1945 Hiroshi went to Waseda University to study law. He married Michiko Inaba. With the absence of Yamauchi’s father, his grandparents met to arrange the marriage.[3]
In 1949, Yamauchi's grandfather, the incumbent president of Nintendo, suffered a stroke. As he had no other immediate successor, he asked Hiroshi to come immediately to Nintendo to assume the position of president. He had to leave Waseda University to do so. Hiroshi would only accept the position if he were the only family member working at Nintendo. Reluctantly, Hiroshi's grandfather agreed, and died shortly after. Under the agreement, his older cousin had to be fired. Due to his young age and total lack of any management experience, most employees did not take Hiroshi seriously and many resented him. Soon after taking over, he had to deal with a strike by factory employees who expected him to cave in easily. Instead, he asserted his authority by firing many long-time employees who questioned his authority. He had the company name changed to Nintendo Karuta and established its new headquarters in Kyoto. Yamauchi led Nintendo in a "notoriously imperialistic style".[4] He was the sole judge of potential new products, and only a product that appealed to him and his keen instincts went on the market.[5][6][7]
He was the first to introduce the plastic Western playing card into the Japanese market. Western playing cards were still a novelty in Japan and the public associated them with Western-styled gambling games such as poker and bridge. Most gambling activities were technically illegal by default with only a few legally sanctioned exceptions (horse racing, pachinko and lottery). Therefore, the market for anything which was associated with gambling, including Hanafuda, was limited. Yamauchi's first "hit" came when he made a licensing agreement with Walt Disney in 1959 for his plastic playing cards. Nintendo targeted its playing cards as a tool for party games that the whole family could enjoy, a foreshadowing of the company's approach going into the 21st century. Disney's tie-in was made towards that end. Nintendo's Disney playing card was also accompanied by a small, thin booklet with many tutorials for different card games. The strategy succeeded and the product sold 600,000 units in one year, soon gracing Nintendo with the domination of Japanese playing card market. With this success, Hiroshi once again changed the company name to Nintendo Company Limited and took the company public (listed on stock market) and became the chairman.[8][9] He then decided to travel to the U.S. to visit the United States Playing Card Company, the world's biggest manufacturer of playing cards. Upon arriving in Cincinnati, Yamauchi was disappointed to see a small-scale office and factory. This led to the realization that card manufacturing was an extremely limited venture.
Upon his return to Japan, Hiroshi Yamauchi decided to diversify the company. Some of the new areas he ventured into included a taxi company called Daiya, a love hotel with rooms rented by the hour, and individually portioned instant rice. All of these ventures eventually failed and brought the company into the brink of bankruptcy. However, one day, Yamauchi spotted a factory engineer named Gunpei Yokoi playing with a simple extendable claw, something Yokoi made to amuse himself during his break. Yamauchi ordered Yokoi to develop the extendable claw into a proper product. The product was named Urutora Hando (Ultra Hand) and was an instant hit. It was then that Hiroshi decided to move Nintendo’s focus into toy making. With an already established distribution system into department stores for its playing cards, the transition was a natural one for Nintendo. Hiroshi created a new department called Games and Setup, manned initially by only Yokoi and another employee who looked after the finances, and was situated in a warehouse in Kyoto for the purpose of research and development. Gunpei Yokoi was solely assigned to develop new products. Yokoi utilised his degree in engineering by developing what is now known as electric toys such as the Love Tester and a light gun using solar cells for targets. These electric toys were quite a novelty in the 60s when most other toys were simple in origin, such as toy blocks or dolls. Eventually Nintendo succeeded in establishing itself as a major player in the toy market.[10][11][12]
Hiroshi Yamauchi realized that technological breakthroughs in the electronic industry meant that electronics could be incorporated into entertainment products since the prices were decreasing. Atari and Magnavox were already selling gaming devices for use with television sets. Hiroshi negotiated a license with Magnavox to sell its game console, the Magnavox Odyssey. After hiring several Sharp Electronics employees, Nintendo launched the Color TV Game 6 in Japan, which was followed by several revisions and updates of this series.
Hiroshi decided to expand Nintendo into the United States in order to cash in on the growing American arcade market. He hired his son-in-law Minoru Arakawa to head the new American operation. When Japanese hits such as Radar Scope, Space Fever and Sheriff did not achieve the same success in the United States, Yamauchi turned to designer Shigeru Miyamoto's pet project, Donkey Kong, which became a smash hit.
Yokoi, who Hiroshi had set in charge of the games department, created the first portable LCD video game featuring a microprocessor called the Game & Watch. Although the Game & Watch was successful, Hiroshi wanted something that was cheap enough that most could buy it and yet something unique enough so that they dominated the market for as long as possible.[13]
The Famicom was created and Hiroshi was so confident with this device that he promised some electronics company million unit orders within two years. The Famicom easily reached that goal, and, after selling several million units. Hiroshi realized the importance of the software that ran on the game systems and made sure the system was easy to program. Hiroshi believed that technicians did not create excellent games but artists did. The Famicom was released in the United States as the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). Hiroshi with no engineering or video game background was the only one deciding which games were to be released. His remarkable intuition for what people would want in the future was one of the main reasons for Nintendo's success. To help spring creativity, he created three research and development groups and allowed them to compete against each other. This caused the designers to work harder to try to get their games approved.[14][15]
In 1990, the Super Famicom was released in Japan. It was subsequently released a year later in North America, as the "Super Nintendo Entertainment System" (SNES) and in 1992 in Europe. The Super Famicom had been sold out within three days in Japan and had gamers camping for days outside shops in hope of getting the next shipment. The SNES was redesigned for its release and was more box like as compared to its counterpart in Japan. At the same time, Game Boy was released in the US, and Nintendo spent millions in advertising for both consoles, which resulted in a big pay off as they beat other similar consoles in the figures war. Yamauchi had displayed from the beginning a knack at identifying good games even though he had never played them, and he continued to do so alone at least until 1993. One of the major reasons for the success of SNES was the abundance of good games developed for it.
In 1993, the Super FX Chip was launched that would make the SNES display 3D graphics. Around the same time, Nintendo increased its research facilities. Nintendo showed major expansion during this period with new plants, R&D facilities and a partnership with Rare. Later, Donkey Kong Country was released. In 1995, the Virtual Boy was released, but did not sell well. Despite the bust, Hiroshi said at a press conference that he still had faith in it and that the company would continue developing games for it.
In 1996, Nintendo released its new, fully 3D console, the Nintendo 64, and Yamauchi used it to draw attention away from Virtual Boy. Simultaneously, Super Mario 64 was launched as the first fully 3D platform game. In 1999, Yamauchi and Nintendo announced their intentions to work on a new system with an IBM Gekko processor and Matsushita DVD technology codenamed Dolphin. This system was christened GameCube. Yamauchi talked at the E3 about the impact that the release of Xbox would have on the GameCube.
Yamauchi admitted at the 2001 Nintendo Space World event that he had intentionally ordered the Nintendo 64 to be difficult to program games for. The idea was to repel untalented third-party developers from the console, and hence tighten the quality of third-party games. However, his plan backfired and merely increased the number of poorly developed games for the console. As a result of this, the Nintendo Gamecube was to take a step in the other direction, and provide an easy, smooth and intuitive programming environment for game developers.[16][17]
Yamauchi touted the Nintendo GameCube as a machine designed exclusively to be a video game console; an approach which he considered different from Microsoft's and Sony's for their respective Xbox and PlayStation 2 consoles. He believed that the GameCube would specialize in providing the best gaming experience possible as opposed to the all-encompassing entertainment hubs being promoted in its competitors' products (both the Xbox and the PlayStation 2 have DVD and CD-ROM playback functionalities, while the Xbox also features a built-in hard drive). This bias towards "performance only" and the creation of hardware that would allow developers to "easily create games" is what Yamauchi believed would set the GameCube apart from its competitors.
Yamauchi also wanted the machine to be the least expensive available of its kind, in his belief that people "do not play with the game machine itself. They play with the software, and they are forced to purchase a game machine in order to use the software. Therefore the price of the machine should be as cheap as possible." Nintendo hence priced the GameCube significantly less expensively than its rivals in the market, although the console's games were priced identically to those designed for the competing systems.
In 1950, Michiko, Hiroshi's wife gave birth to their first child, a daughter named Yoko. During the next few years, Michiko had several miscarriages and was often ill. In 1957, she gave birth to another daughter, Fujiko and, shortly after, a son named Katsuhito.[18]
When Yamauchi's father, Shikanojo, returned years later to see his son, he refused to speak to him. When Hiroshi was close to 30, he was contacted by his half sister and informed that Shikanojo had died in stroke. At the funeral he met his father's wife and their four daughters whom he never knew existed. He began feeling sorry about that he had not taken the opportunity to reconcile with his father when he was still alive. The death of his father changed Hiroshi, and he grieved for months and cried freely. From that day he has always made regular visits to his father's grave.[19]
In the early 1990s, the Seattle Mariners were up for sale and Washington state's senator Slade Gorton asked Nintendo America to find a Japanese investor who would keep the club in Seattle. Hiroshi Yamauchi offered to buy it even though he had never been to a baseball game. Even though the owner accepted the offer, the baseball commissioner and ownership committee was strongly opposed to the idea of a non-North American owner and did not approve the deal. However, following the strong support and sentiments of the people of Seattle and press and having the decision be deemed as racist, the commissioner formally approved the deal, under the condition that Yamauchi had less than 50% votes. This was a major development in American baseball because this opened the gates for Japanese baseball players to American league teams, entry in which had been denied so far as the Japanese players were not deemed physically fit for the toughness of the sport in North America. In 2000, the club made its first profit of $2.6 million since its acquisition by Yamauchi.[20][21] Yamauchi since purchasing the Seattle Mariners has never been to a Seattle Mariners baseball game.
On May 31, 2002, Yamauchi stepped down as president of Nintendo and was succeeded by the head of Nintendo's Corporate Planning Division, Satoru Iwata. Hiroshi Yamauchi subsequently became the chairman of Nintendo's board of directors. He finally left the board on June 29, 2005, due to his age, and because he felt that he was leaving the company in good hands. Yamauchi also refused to accept his retirement pension, which was reported to be around $9 million to $14 million, feeling that Nintendo could put it to better use. He is also Nintendo's largest shareholder despite stepping down. He still retains a 10% share in Nintendo as of 2008.[1] He is currently the 14° richest man in Japan [2] due to his shares in Nintendo since their success with the Wii and Nintendo DS consoles. He donated the majority of the 7.5 billion yen used to build a new cancer treatment center in Kyoto.[3] Following the announcement of the Wii U and the price cut of the Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo shares fell to 12,290 yen, the biggest drop since 2009. Yamauchi is estimated to have lost $312 million USD (approximately 24.2 billion yen).[4]
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