Nintendo seal of quality by Jadusable64 on DeviantArt

Nintendo Seal Of Quality. Nintendo Seal of Quality Ironon Patch Large 4 Etsy While Nintendo did have firm quality control measures in place regarding the NES (official publishers could only develop five releases per year, for example), the measure was mostly superficial. A common misconception is that the seal (also known as the "Official Nintendo Seal" and "Original Nintendo Seal of Quality," with another variation "Official Nintendo Licensed Product" used for merchandise) is meant to be a guarantee that that the game they are playing is a "good" game

Nintendo seal of quality by Jadusable64 on DeviantArt
Nintendo seal of quality by Jadusable64 on DeviantArt from www.deviantart.com

A lot of people didn't believe that Nintendo could release good products, so they worked really hard and put the seal on there to let people know it's Nintendo and they aren't buying absolute shit. This seal was introduced by Nintendo of America in NTSC countries, and it lasted for three years, until 1988

Nintendo seal of quality by Jadusable64 on DeviantArt

The Nintendo Seal of Quality (currently known as Official Nintendo Seal in NTSC regions) is a gold seal that was first used by Nintendo of America and later adopted by Nintendo of Europe which places it on any game licensed for use on one of its video game consoles, denoting that the game has been properly licensed by Nintendo (and in theory, been checked for quality) The Official Nintendo Seal, known in PAL regions as the Original Nintendo Seal of Quality and formerly known in NTSC regions as the Official Nintendo Seal of Quality, is a gold sunburst seal on the back of all official Nintendo -licensed products and merchandise, used by Nintendo of America and Nintendo of Europe since 1985 and 1990, respectively, to denote that the product has been properly. A common misconception is that the seal (also known as the "Official Nintendo Seal" and "Original Nintendo Seal of Quality," with another variation "Official Nintendo Licensed Product" used for merchandise) is meant to be a guarantee that that the game they are playing is a "good" game

Nintendo Seal of Quality IronOn Patch Grote 4 Etsy Nederland. While Nintendo did have firm quality control measures in place regarding the NES (official publishers could only develop five releases per year, for example), the measure was mostly superficial. A lot of people didn't believe that Nintendo could release good products, so they worked really hard and put the seal on there to let people know it's Nintendo and they aren't buying absolute shit.

Nintendo Seal of Quality Ironon Patch Etsy. A common misconception is that the seal (also known as the "Official Nintendo Seal" and "Original Nintendo Seal of Quality," with another variation "Official Nintendo Licensed Product" used for merchandise) is meant to be a guarantee that that the game they are playing is a "good" game In order to help restore consumer confidence, all licensed NES games that were released for sale carried the Nintendo Seal of Quality (SOQ)