Draft:IQue: Difference between revisions
From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum
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SuperMax124 (talk | contribs) m SuperMax124 moved page IQue (China) to IQue: Text replacement - "(China)" to "" |
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===Background=== |
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⚫ | '''iQue''' is a Suzhou-based company that was founded as a joint venture between Wei Yen and [[Nintendo]] back in 2002. It is known for releasing Nintendo's portable consoles, as well as the iQue Player (the Chinese version of the [[Nintendo 64]] that is a hybrid of a plug-and-play and a home video game console.), to the Chinese market with Chinese versions of the Nintendo GameCube and Wii planned under the names of iQue Cube and iQue Wii, respectively, but were cancelled. Nintendo released these under the iQue brand to bypass China's ban on video games at the time. As of 2013, it is a fully-owned subsidiary of Nintendo. |
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[[Category:China]] |
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[[Category:Video game logos]] |
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[[Category:Chinese video game logos]] |
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[[Category:Nintendo]] |
Latest revision as of 18:26, 20 October 2024
Notice: The page IQue in the mainspace is currently a redirect to this draft. This page is currently being drafted.It is a work in progress that anyone can edit. Please ensure the page is compliant with our formatting guidelines before submitting. Last edited by Gilby1385 (talk | contribs) 0 seconds ago. (Update) |
Background
iQue is a Suzhou-based company that was founded as a joint venture between Wei Yen and Nintendo back in 2002. It is known for releasing Nintendo's portable consoles, as well as the iQue Player (the Chinese version of the Nintendo 64 that is a hybrid of a plug-and-play and a home video game console.), to the Chinese market with Chinese versions of the Nintendo GameCube and Wii planned under the names of iQue Cube and iQue Wii, respectively, but were cancelled. Nintendo released these under the iQue brand to bypass China's ban on video games at the time. As of 2013, it is a fully-owned subsidiary of Nintendo.
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