Please note: As of 01/11/2013, SpotPass functionality in Nintendo Letter Box has ceased. Please see the statement about the Nintendo Letter Box SpotPass service for more information.
You thought that by using SpotPass on the Nintendo 3DS system, you might be able to remove the disappointment of accessing the server only to find out that no new messages had come through.
That’s right. If we used that, what your friends or family had sent would automatically be delivered to your hands, so we thought, “This is good.” I made presentation materials outlining the merits to remaking the software for the Nintendo 3DS system and excitedly took it to you.
And my opening words were, “Why don’t you remake it for the Nintendo 3DS system?”
Yes. (laughs) I was like, “Now hold on a sec! I prepared all these materials!” (laughs)
But no matter how much better it would have been to remake it for the Nintendo 3DS system, it must have been hard for Denyu-sha to take what they had spent so long making for the Nintendo DSi and start all over again.
Yes, it sure was! (laughs wryly)
What was your reaction when Imai-san suggested making it for the Nintendo 3DS system?
I actually didn’t hear anything concrete about the Nintendo 3DS system until quite a bit later. The Nintendo DSi version was almost done and all we had to do was debug it as the end of 2009 was approaching, but then Imai-san said, “Why don’t we take it slow at the end of the year?”
(laughs)
Normally, you needed to be debugging, but he wanted us to take it easy! (laughs)
Yes. So as one year turned into the next, I was like, “Eh? What’s going on?”
It was a New Year’s of discontent.
I’d been told to take it easy, but I didn’t feel easy at all!
(laughs)
Then finally, toward the end of January, talk of making it again for a new platform came our way.
At that time, the name Nintendo 3DS was still secret.
Yes. I heard about the characteristics of the new hardware, and in addition to SpotPass, which we mentioned earlier, it was more powerful in a lot of ways. I realised that we could do the things we hadn’t been able to on the Nintendo DSi system and my motivation shot through the roof. Then we started remaking it, but—I think it was April of 2010—one day I was suddenly told, “There’s something I want to show you,” and I was shown an actual Nintendo 3DS for the first time. In an instant, I was like, “Hey!” The graphics were popping out! (laughs)
Right! (laughs)
No one had ever said anything to me about 3D, so I was stunned. I felt like we were making software for one seriously stellar machine. Along with that surprise came a bunch of new ideas about what we could do to make the software more fun.
Kondo-san, from the point of view of design, what changed from the Nintendo DSi version to the Nintendo 3DS version?
The biggest change was graphics that pop out. On the Nintendo DSi system, you just enjoyed playing what you had written, but on the Nintendo 3DS, the stationery could be 3D and you could write messages that stood out, so that was the biggest change.
Was it satisfying to make the pop-out pen?
Yes. But we went through quite a process of trial and error for writing in 3D. At first, we tested a pen that would cause it to gradually stand out as you wrote, but once we actually used it, controlling it got too complicated and we couldn’t draw how we wanted.
So there was a lot of experimentation.
Yes. And we wanted to make something that anyone could do, so in the end we made two options, writing normally and writing with the pop-out pen.
You actually could have done something more complicated, but you chose to keep it simple.
Yes.
You just mentioned the stationery . How did that come about?
To go back to when we were making the software for Nintendo DSi, a lot of people were saying, “What should I write?” when we gave them a blank page and said, “It’s a picture diary. Write whatever you want.”
Artistic people would be fine, though.
Right. We thought that might be one reason people stop keeping diaries and decided to prepare stationery that would stimulate their desire to write something. But we went through a lot of trial-and-error in design.
After all, there isn’t any such thing as stereoscopic-3D stationery in real life.
Exactly. So we tried all sorts of things with regards to how we could design the stationery to please users. We thought of seasonal themes, things for generating topics, and things that moved and would complement the writing.
Yes, right. And we knew stationery was particularly popular with women, so we bought a heap of comic books and magazines that young women would read!
Right! (laughs)
We all read them and studied them. And last year around summer or autumn, the stationery was almost done. I think there were about 40 types.
No, we made about 50.
Looking at them, I thought they were all great.
Yes, we were singing our own praises! (laughs) We were telling each other it was a job well done.
Okay! (laughs)
But someone held the opposite view.
Enter Kitai-san.
Yes! (laughs)
Kitai-san, how did you become involved in the design of the stationery?
I was originally working on a different project as designer. Then about summer or autumn last year (2011), our design team received a request to look over the designs.
At first you were just to check the design.
That’s right. So one other women designer and I took a look at the stationery designs. They were interesting and pleasant, but they weren’t cute. We agreed on that and decided to write down some pretty harsh criticism, but...
But?
I was the only one who wrote down what I truly felt. (laughs)
(laughs) What did you write?
I wrote that they were “so 1990s.”
That’s shocking. (laughs)
No, I remember you being even harsher.
Yes. Being 90s-ish isn’t that severe. Please...be honest. (laughs)
No...do I really have to say it?
Please. (laughs)
...
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