SATOSHI TAJIRI


is a Japanese electronic game designer and the creator of ''Pocket Monsters'', better known as ''Pokémon''.

Contents
About
Childhood and education
Game Freak
Nintendo
References
See also
External links

About


Satoshi Tajiri was born in Machida, Tokyo in 1965 to a Japanese family.
As a little boy, he discovered the beauty of the forests. Young Satoshi used to wander and gather insects. In order to complete his collection, he would also trade with his friends. He later became a video games tester for magazines.
In 1982, Satoshi decided, along with his friends, to create a magazine about new video games and comic books titled ''Game Freak''. The magazine became very popular and Satoshi was encouraged to write and publish two books, named "CAP Land" and "Catch 'em all CAP land". In the 1980s, the crew of "Game Freak" made the decision to develop video games of their own. They moved to a Nintendo building in Japan, and developed new video games such as "Yoshi's Egg".
In the year 1991, when the Game Boy appeared, Tajiri imagined a game, based on the insects he used to collect as a child. The idea of catching and collecting monsters was new. He was inspired when he saw two kids playing the Game Boy next to each other. He came to Shigeru Miyamoto and together they developed the link cable technology. With the approval of the Nintendo company, Tajiri and his staff began the process of developing the game. It took five years to develop it, which stands as the longest development timeline in Nintendo's history.
Three years later in 1994 he released Pulseman on the Sega mega drive, the music was done by Junchi Masadua, the art was drawn by Ken Sugimori.

Childhood and education


As a young boy, Satoshi lived in a suburb of Tokyo and loved to collect bugs. In the late 1970s, the forests and fields that Satoshi loved as a child were paved over by apartments and parking lots. This saddened Tajiri, as modern kids wouldn't be able to go bug-catching as he did.
Satoshi did not like school. His father wanted him to be an electrical utility repairman, but this is not what he wanted. His ideas for Pokémon grew, as he wanted to give modern children the chance to hunt for creatures as he did. Satoshi got into games when he was at technical school, spending all his time in arcades. He was such a big fan that one local arcade gave him a Space Invaders machine to take home.

Game Freak


In 1982, Satoshi and his friends James Hanzatko and Yuusuke Santamaria formed a game magazine, called "Game Freak." One of his Game Freak friends was Ken Sugimori, who drew all of the Pokémon's images. In the early 1980], he won a contest sponsored by Sega involving making a video game. He later had his first video game, ''Quinty'', published by Namco for the Nintendo Famicom. In 1991, Satoshi discovered the Game Boy. When he first saw Link Cables, he imagined insects creeping along them, and the Pokémon idea was born. The game was given some initial funding and concept work from another game design studio, "Creatures." Tajiri named his development company "Game Freak" after his early magazine.

Nintendo


Tajiri went to work for Nintendo and spent the next six years working on Pokémon. He became friends with Shigeru Miyamoto, the creator of ''Mario'', ''The Legend of Zelda'', ''Pikmin'', and ''Donkey Kong'', who also became a mentor to Tajiri. As a tribute to Tajiri and Miyamoto, Ash Ketchum (the anime counterpart of "Red" in the games) is named ''Satoshi'' and Gary Oak (the anime counterpart of "Blue" in the English games, and "Green" in the original Japanese version) is named ''Shigeru'' in the Japanese version of Pokémon.
Most recently, Tajiri (along with Nintendo Co. Ltd. president Satoru Iwata) served as an executive producer for the Game Boy Advance game , released outside of Japan as ''Drill Dozer''.
Satoshi Tajiri has allegedly been diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome.[1][2] He has been described by Nintendo officials as exceedingly creative but "reclusive" and "eccentric."[3]

References


See also



Pokémon

Pokémon video game series

External links



''Interview with Satoshi Tajiri'' from Time Asia

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