A story has surfaced online over the past few days telling the story of a 95-year-old grandmother in Japan who received a touching response from Nintendo's support team.
Grandma's daughter, Kuniko Tsusaka, seventy, told this story in a recent Japanese newspaper, Asahi Shimbun. He notes that his mother lived with his Game Boy to enjoy the games of Tetris
Kuniko had trouble finding any stores selling new Game Boys anywhere that could fix a broken system in his hometown of Chiba, but his son told him that Nintendo was providing good customer support. As it turned out, when her son used the phrase & # 39; kami taiou & # 39; (神 対 応), which means & # 39; god's support & # 39; or & # 39; divine interaction & # 39; to describe this wonderful resource, the mysterious Kuniko, who thinks he actually said the word & # 39; kami & # 39; (紙) which means & # 39; page & # 39; (thanks, Kotaku
This led to Kuniko sending Game Boy's mother to Nintendo in the mail, along with a letter. Within a week, he received a response from Nintendo's customer support team, who said they didn't have the necessary parts to fix the machine. Instead, they find a new Game Boy in the repository and send it along with a letter wishing Grandma a long life.
Tetris's favorite grandmother lived to 99. Kuniko said, "up in the sky, thanks, I guess."