▲
2
▼
The Nintendo Entertainment System versions of Defender II, Joust, and Millipede were all conceived as part of a failed deal between Nintendo and Atari to distribute the Famicom internationally. Development was outsourced to HAL Laboratory, who decided to publish the games themselves in 1987 after Nintendo took international distribution of the console into their own hands two years prior. One additional title was put together as part of the Atari deal, but it was never released, with none of the parties involved revealing what it was.
Because of the circumstances behind their conception, the Japanese versions of these three games all feature title screens reminiscent of Famicom launch titles, with the copyright information uniformly reading "COPYRIGHT 1983 ATARI". When Nintendo of America exported the games to North America in 1988, the title screens were made more elaborate and the copyright info was updated. The ways of accessing the game's modes are also changed in the North American release; instead of having them all available on the title screen, the player must press Start in Defender II and Millipede to bring up a menu (itself displaying additional copyright information). In Joust, pressing Start skips the menu and automatically begins Game A; the player must press Select in order to access the menu.
The development of Joust as a launch title for an Atari-distributed system would have a prominent knock-on effect on HAL and Nintendo's future. The game was one of the first titles to be programmed by Satoru Iwata, who would go on to become a vital asset to HAL thanks to his coding skills before becoming Nintendo's president in 2002, and his experiences developing Joust would help him program Balloon Fight.
Because of the circumstances behind their conception, the Japanese versions of these three games all feature title screens reminiscent of Famicom launch titles, with the copyright information uniformly reading "COPYRIGHT 1983 ATARI". When Nintendo of America exported the games to North America in 1988, the title screens were made more elaborate and the copyright info was updated. The ways of accessing the game's modes are also changed in the North American release; instead of having them all available on the title screen, the player must press Start in Defender II and Millipede to bring up a menu (itself displaying additional copyright information). In Joust, pressing Start skips the menu and automatically begins Game A; the player must press Select in order to access the menu.
The development of Joust as a launch title for an Atari-distributed system would have a prominent knock-on effect on HAL and Nintendo's future. The game was one of the first titles to be programmed by Satoru Iwata, who would go on to become a vital asset to HAL thanks to his coding skills before becoming Nintendo's president in 2002, and his experiences developing Joust would help him program Balloon Fight.
The Cutting Room Floor articles:
https://tcrf.net/Defender_II_(NES)
https://tcrf.net/Joust_(NES)#Regional_Differences
https://tcrf.net/Millipede_(NES,_HAL_Laboratory)
https://tcrf.net/Defender_II_(NES)
https://tcrf.net/Joust_(NES)#Regional_Differences
https://tcrf.net/Millipede_(NES,_HAL_Laboratory)
Related Games
Balloon Kid
Pokémon Violet
Donkey Kong: Coconut Crackers
Pokémon Brilliant Diamond
Pokémon Stadium
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening
Wii Sports Resort
Donkey Kong
Golden Sun: The Lost Age
The Legend of Zelda: Tri Force Heroes
Super Mario Bros. / Duck Hunt / World Class Track Meet
Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade
Vs. Duck Hunt
Luigi's Mansion
Pikmin 3 Deluxe
Metroid: Zero Mission
Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness
Bomberman Hero
Devil's Third
Wario Land 4
New Play Control! Metroid Prime 2: Dark Echoes
Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem
Killer Instinct Gold
Kirby's Avalanche
Pokémon Emerald Version
Doubutsu Banchou
Pokémon Yellow Version: Special Pikachu Edition
Kirby's Epic Yarn
Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Game & Watch Gallery
Pokémon: Let's Go, Eevee!
Super Mario 3D World
F-Zero
Pandora's Tower
DK: King of Swing
SimCity
Yoshi's New Island
NES Classic Edition
Pengo
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX
Pro-Am 64
Dragon Warrior
Nintendo Switch Sports
Solstice: The Quest for the Staff of Demnos
Super Mario Sunshine
Donkey Kong Country 3
Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time
Radar Scope
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze