“Rather than just tossing in a coin and getting into the game immediately, you must click an icon, wait for the logo, wait for the title, look at the instructions screen, wait until everything loads, and then you’re finally at the main screen, after which you can start playing.

“I want you to measure the total time this takes and shorten it by even one second.”

To prove that he was serious about this, Sakurai then revealed that GameCube racing game Kirby Air Ride was originally supposed to have Dolby Surround audio, but Sakurai chose to ditch it because it would have meant showing the Dolby logo at the start of the game for a few seconds.

“I feel very sorry for making the user wait,” he explained. “If you take one second from each user, that means you’ll be taking 10,000 seconds from 10,000 people. The more this repeats over the years, the more time you will cause players to lose.”

  • sneak100 [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    LOL that’s such a valid reason

    He’s said some very wonky shit about work ethic & worker management on his channel, but it’s still cool to publicise so much knowledge about game-making, esp when it’s usually very much safeguarded by Nintendo corp to maintain the image of the “nintendo magic” of video games. The more we demystify how anything in our world is made the better imo