Asked it earlier, but why not. A ribbon for me too, please.

If you want it somewhere else let me know.
Asked it earlier, but why not. A ribbon for me too, please.
I wish I was an artist and had some wonderfully touching picture to share. I never even knew the man, so I only have a story about how he impacted me.
When I was 9 years old, I was sent to a summer camp where I was bullied relentlessly. I remember being pinned down as several other kids, many older, would beat me. I never told anyone. All I had to look forward to was the copy of Kirby's Dream Land from HAL Laboratories that my mother had mailed me to play on my Nintendo GameBoy.
Most kids anticipated the daytime activities. Not me though. I anticipated the night, when I could turn on a little lamp and play Kirby, squinting my eyes to see the green-and-black images.
I always appreciated a challenging game, but Iwata's idea for Kirby, that anyone should be able to defeat it, was soothing for me at the time. It was just what I needed in that moment, and that game gave me something to look forward to. I don't know, but it might have saved my life. Maybe that's always why I held Nintendo, their games, and even Iwata's tenure up to a higher standard.
I'm still a Nintendo gamer all these years later, and I don't forget what Kirby's Dream Land did for me. It's amazing how creators will never know how they touched us. And then they're gone.
How is it disrespectful to react with shock to shocking and genuinely upsetting news?
Iwata being such an important person that people are having a visceral response to his passing is its own form of tribute.
Hit me up with one too![]()
If you want it somewhere else let me know.
I would be grateful to have one too...![]()
If you want it somewhere else let me know.
Well, fuck. Yesterday I was thinking about how little people we have lost in this industry compared to the movie and music sectors, and now this! RIP Iwata, thanks for everything you have done, you will be missed.
I wish I was an artist and had some wonderfully touching picture to share. I never even knew the man, so I only have a story about how he impacted me.
When I was 9 years old, I was sent to a summer camp where I was bullied relentlessly. I remember being pinned down as several other kids, many older, would beat me. I never told anyone. All I had to look forward to was the copy of Kirby's Dream Land from HAL Laboratories that my mother had mailed me to play on my Nintendo GameBoy.
Most kids anticipated the daytime activities. Not me though. I anticipated the night, when I could turn on a little lamp and play Kirby, squinting my eyes to see the green-and-black images.
I always appreciated a challenging game, but Iwata's idea for Kirby, that anyone should be able to defeat it, was soothing for me at the time. It was just what I needed in that moment, and that game gave me something to look forward to. I don't know, but it might have saved my life. Maybe that's always why I held Nintendo, their games, and even Iwata's tenure up to a higher standard.
I'm still a Nintendo gamer all these years later, and I don't forget what Kirby's Dream Land did for me. It's amazing how creators will never know how they touched us. And then they're gone.
![]()
If you want it somewhere else let me know.
If anyone could add a ribbon to my avatar, it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks so much in advance.
My mother passed away from cancer 2 years ago (she was 67). She had her ups and downs on the 2 weeks she was at the hospital, but I still remember a few days before, on a Saturday how ..alive she was. A friend of her and even 2 friends of mine came to visit that day, talked to her and left because of how well she looked. Her doctor came by and was really happy to see her progress.From what people have said here and elsewhere, seems like it can just reverse on you extremely quickly.
He may have thought he was on the mend when it all went bad.
If anyone could add a ribbon to my avatar, it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks so much in advance.
I sensed a kindness in Iwata too. That quality is especially worth honouring... and so hard to mourn.
Thanks!