Toshihiro Kondo, president of Nihon Falcom, spoke about the history of his company to Japan’s Famitsu magazine a few weeks back. He’s currently heading a company that, after a lull, is going from strength to strength — its latest PSP RPG, The Legend of Heroes: Ao no Kiseki, has sold nearly a quarter million copies in Japan, making it one of the most successful titles for Japan’s oldest RPG company in years.

In the very beginning, though — all the way back in 1981 — Falcom consisted entirely of Masayuki Kato, a computer engineer who became enraptured with the first personal computers that hit stores in the 1970s. “I’m one of the rare people in this industry who came here from a ‘normal’ job,” he told Famitsu this week. “After college I worked for a decade or so as a computer technician at an automaker. I was stationed overseas at Bangkok when I touched an Apple II computer for the first time, and it was just a massive sort of culture shock to me — I thought to myself ‘What have I been doing with myself all this time?’ So I bought one and started messing with it, and compared to the large-scale computers we had at work, it really seemed like they were more suited for entertainment purposes. I had tons of fun playing games on it, typing in the programs they printed in magazines and playing them with my son. He would keep saying to me ‘Dad, can you have it so I have more bullets?’ or ‘Can you make that bad guy stop showing up?’, and in the midst of modifying programs, I learned how to make my own games.”

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