Nintendo Video Game Designer Shigeru Miyamoto Turns to Life for Inspiration

Written by Sarah Ward @ 12:35 pm on July 23, 2010  

Nintendo Video Game Designer Shigeru Miyamoto. Photo c/o Lawrence K. Ho / LA Times

Shigeru Miyamoto is Nintendo’s chief video game designer and the creative genius behind their best-selling games including Mario, Donkey Kong, and Zelda. He’s also the legend video game designers aspire to be.

A natural innovator, Miyamoto received his formal education from the Kanazawa College of Industrial Arts in Japan and finds inspiration from real life experiences for video games. Wii Fit came about as a result of his family’s efforts to get healthier, hit the gym regularly, and track their weight. “It made me think that perhaps health could be a subject for a game,” Miyamoto told The Sunday Times. And thus Wii Fit was born.

When Miyamoto got a puppy, the dog training class with his sheltie inspired him to create the video game Nintendogs. When asked about Nintendogs’ popularity, he reports, “rather than trying to follow industry trends, it’s based on things that people find appealing in general. Not just what they find appealing in a video game.”

Video game design and development is a popular field that relates not only to fictitious worlds, but as Miyamoto shows us, the one we know and love.

Share and Enjoy:

If you have valuable information to present to our readers, we would love to hear from you. Please leave comments or contact us about guest blogging. We're always looking for guest bloggers. If you are interested, please contact us through our contact form on our contact page. We appreciate you taking the time to read our article and hope it has benefitted you in some way.

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment