
Unfortunately, the one part of Nintendo's strategy that these three titles failed to accurately predict was the releasing games on the 64DD part, which Nintendo did not end up adopting as a business model.
The Famicom Disk System was a fairly popular mode of playing and storing games, but the 64DD didn't fare as well. The FDS had the advantage of being attached to a system people owned and liked, while the Nintendo 64 saw nowhere near the Famicom's success (to say the least). Nintendo of America declined to support or release the peripheral right away, effectively dooming the already-shaky device. And to make things worse, Nintendo of Japan only made it available with a subscription to their RANDNet online service, making its commercial failure a self-fulfilling prophecy. The Mario Artist series, then, was destined for obscurity regardless of quality. Paint Studio is like the lost sequel to Mario Paint: a drawing program, bundled with a mouse, that featured several Nintendo-themed stamps, including Rare's N64 characters and all 151 Red/Blue-era Pokémon. It interfaced with a wacky peripheral called the Nintendo 64 Capture Cartridge (included with Talent Studio), a cartridge with connections for composite video input that allowed images to be imported from video.
Polygon Studio enables players to create simple 3D models, which could then be imported into Paint Studio or sent to a printing service via Randnet. You can use images from Paint Studio as textures for the models, as well. These polygon models can also be used in customizable games.Talent Studio is a 'game' in which players can map their own faces (captured from video with the Capture Cartridge) onto characters with customizable body shapes and clothing. These characters can then be put into 'fashion shows' or short animated movies made within Talent Studio.
While we're still (oddly) waiting for Nintendo's latest drawing tool on either the DS or Wii, the ideas found in the other games have resurfaced in interesting places. The idea of making in-game caricatures of yourself, of course, would become very important to Nintendo a bit later (two console generations later) when the company hit upon the idea of making it part of the system rather than a standalone game, and using your DIY avatars in other games. The printing-service idea has recently been brought back for photobooks and business cards via the Wii in Japan. And outside of its main features, Polygon Studio made its own contribution to Nintendo's future, with the minigames seen in the following video. See if anything looks familiar.
[Boxes via 64DD.net]
Virtually Overlooked is a weekly feature that spotlights games that aren't yet on the Virtual Console, but should be. Want more Virtually Overlooked? Check out the first year!












Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-28-2008 @ 3:43PM
Mr Khan said...
N64DD games? Ah. Now we venture into the realm of the truly obscure
Reply
8-28-2008 @ 4:42PM
David Hinkle said...
JC's middle name is "obscure."
Actually, it's not. It's "Awesome."
8-28-2008 @ 3:51PM
meist3r said...
This should be in the "Born for Wii" section. I'd love to see an advanced version of Mario Paint or other sculpture/drawing tool with the 3D input of the Wiimote.
Reply
8-28-2008 @ 4:02PM
bowtie said...
it's smooth moves, straight up.
Reply
8-28-2008 @ 4:03PM
Drahken said...
That's not similar to Wario Ware. That IS Wario Ware.
Reply
8-28-2008 @ 5:06PM
CJC said...
Holy crap. I remember reading about this in Nintendo Power roughly 10 years ago.
Next thing you know, you guys will be doing an "Overlooked: Satellaview Games" article.
Reply
8-28-2008 @ 11:53PM
Phenylketonurics said...
That's brilliant -- seriously, this concept applied within context on the Wii would make me bizarrely happy. I'm a visual arts student in college and Nintendo needs to let me have some sort of excuse for playing video games in lieu of drawing exercises, haha.
WarioWare minigames?! So THAT'S where those came from~
Reply
8-29-2008 @ 9:57PM
zchry said...
If this were implemented well, as in all-out Photoshop standards (just the digital painting stuff, not so much the photo retouching stuff), I'd be willing to pay up to $75 for it.
Of course, I'd want it to have Motion Plus, and I'd like it to have some sort of save-to-SD functions, as well as online capabilities.
Reply