Nintendo fans will be why do people try to sexualize or eroticize any male-female relationship?able to wander through its long history in a new dedicated museum/gallery set to open in Japan.
On Wednesday, the gaming company announced that its Nintendo Uji Ogura Plant in Kyoto and the surrounding grounds will be repurposed for a gallery space to exhibit Nintendo products launched over the years.
Named "Nintendo Gallery" for now, the space will showcase the company's products across its long history — this could be anything from its beginnings in 1889 to the present, from accessories to consoles. According to the company's press release, visitors can expect exhibits and "experiences," and that's all you get for now.
Nintendo's first ever HQ is located in Kyoto, so the site's location makes sense from a historical perspective. The Uji Plant itself, which was built in 1969 and renovated in the late '80s, was being used to produce hanafuda cards and for product repairs.
Nintendo Gallery is expected to be completed in March 2024.
The news comes mere months after the much-anticipated opening of Super Nintendo World in Osaka, which swung wide its dungeon doors at Universal Studios Japan on March 18, 2021. Among Mario and Yoshi-themed rides and interactive experiences enabled by Power Up wristbands, the park features the world's first interactive Mario Kart theme park ride.
We're pretty sure the Nintendo Gallery will be a slightly more subdued museum experience than an AR-powered rollercoaster, but this is Nintendo, so it will probably be quite a fun, interactive stroll through gaming history when it opens.
[h/t IGN]
Topics Gaming Nintendo
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Google 'Ask for me:' AI that calls businesses on your behalf for pricing and availability
Crossfire is the most epic '90s game you never played
SanDisk unveils world's fastest microSD card with 400GB of storage
Hey Nokia, stop ruining our memories
Use Your Gaming Laptop and Play On Battery Power? Is It Possible?
Proxima Centauri's potentially habitable planet hit by a huge flare
How the Olympics can embrace non
Author Terry Goodkind 'pokes fun' at his book's cover art, ends badly
The Steam Machine: What Went Wrong
Driverless cars, without a driver this time, to be tested on California roads
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。