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  1. Nintendo Entertainment System - Wikipedia

    The Famicom was designed by Masayuki Uemura, with its controller design reused from Nintendo's portable Game & Watch hardware. The western NES model was designed by …

  2. FamiWiki

    2025年12月10日 · FamiWiki covers all topics about the Family Computer (or Famicom for short) and Super Famicom with 1,814 articles and counting.

  3. NES, Famicom, Release Date, & Games - Britannica

    2025年11月20日 · The Nintendo console, or Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), was released as the Famicom in Japan on July 15, 1983. The Famicom offered the ability to play popular …

  4. Nintendo Entertainment System

    Nintendo soon announced plans to release a console of their own in Japan titled the Famicom, or Family Computer. The project was headed by Masayuki Uemura of Nintendo R&D2 who had …

  5. System - Famicom World

    So, after some re-tooling of the guiding principles for arcades and Atari, Nintendo sent forth into living rooms around the world the Famicom, in Japan, and its brother console, the Nintendo …

  6. Family Computer - NESdev Wiki

    2025年9月25日 · The Family Computer (HVC-001: Famicom, FC for short) is a video game console made by Nintendo and sold in Japan starting in 1983. The console would later be sold …

  7. Famicom - National Videogame Museum

    Although Nintendo had originally created the Famicom to bring its own arcade games into the living room, the success of the system meant that it wouldn’t be long before other game …

  8. Nintendo Famicom - Game Console - Computing History

    It was released as the Family Computer but commonly shortened as either the Famicom or the FC. The Famicom had an extremely long life for a console of over 20 years, from 1983 to …

  9. Nintendo Famicom \ NES - Video Game Console Library

    History, technical specs, model chart, pictures and indepth review of the Nintendo Famicom \ NES video game console.

  10. Nintendo Entertainment System models - Wikipedia

    It was originally released in 1983 as the Family Computer [a] (and widely known as the Famicom [b]) in Japan, with design work led by Masayuki Uemura.