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Share link:In this post: Overseas visitors to the newly opened Nintendo Museum are reportedly causing trouble in multiple ways. Increasing tourism is also challenging local residents economically. Concerns over bad behavior by “gaijin” are coupled with doubts about Japanese gaming companies’ reliance on classic characters and lack of innovation.
Overseas visitors to Kyoto’s newly opened Nintendo Museum don’t seem to be able to “read the air” as the Japanese say, and are breaking the house rules. A booming, highly incentivized influx of USD- and euro-packing tourists has been in local news more and more, as wannabe social media stars and sightseers shun local cultural sensitivity to gain engagement.
As recently reported by Cryptopolitan, Nintendo’s long-awaited Nintendo Museum just opened at the beginning of this month in Kyoto, Japan. However, there have been some problems reported with foreign visitors breaking the rules.
Visitors to the museum take prohibited photos, unplug exhibit controllers
Japanese outlet nintendoevery reports that overseas visitors are taking photos in prohibited areas and uploading them to social media. What’s more, incidents of people unplugging fixed cords to investigate whether or not games are running on emulators have been documented .
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