Two Washington state frat boys in the late 1970s proved that persistence and an entrepreneurial spirit can pay off big time. In fact they proved that you can win big by failing. If they hadn’t started a failing trucking business after graduating, they wouldn’t have had the assets in place to make millions of dollars selling Nintendo arcade games across the country.
Before we meet Al Stone and Ron Judy, here’s a little back story:
The Richest Man in Japan
This Japanese businessman named Hiroshi Yamauchi was one bad– well let’s just say he was one what-it-said-on Samuel L. Jackson’s character’s wallet in Pulp Fiction. Yeah he was one of those to the core.
This no-nonsense head honcho was Nintendo’s third and longest-serving president in the esteemed global video game giant’s history. He was a ruthless businessman and had a keen eye for what kind of games the public would want to play most. He was president of Nintendo for longer than Fidel Castro was dictator over Cuba, or Muammar Gaddafi ruled over Libya, and he presided with the same iron-fisted rule.
During that time he oversaw Nintendo’s ascendancy from the 1940s when they were still making board games until the Nintendo Entertainment System came out, and into the 21st century. In 2008 he was the wealthiest man in Japan.
Well if you’ll remember, when Hiroshi decided to try to break into the lucrative United States gaming market in the late 1970s, Japan had still very recently been literally nuclear bombed by the Yankees. Twice. Not to mention its every other city was firebombed back into the Stone Age, then came the Korean War, and after that Vietnam. So for this Japanese company to try to penetrate the foreign and culturally very different Western U.S. market for arcade games– it was a big risk and a bold move.
He started gaining traction and moving Nintendo video game arcade cabinets through a good network with a trading company that would export the cabinets to U.S. distributors, who would turn around and sell them to U.S. vendors. The profits weren’t great, but the system was there to make enormous profits, Hiroshi thought, if they could cut out the middle men and start a U.S. based division of Nintendo to grow the business.