Famicom Vandals Hit Scottish Church
Thanks to the Gaming Age messageboard for pointing to a local Scottish news story describing a church in Aberdeen bizarrely daubed with a Nintendo-related slogan. According to the story, "Paint was splashed all over the church's front door and the phrase 'The Famicom' was scrawled in foot-high writing on the wall." Although the story says that "Police have confirmed they are searching for the culprits - but are unable to shed any light on the meaning of 'The Famicom'", readers may have some idea of the word's origin, although perhaps not the motive for the attack.
Surely they can manage to type something into a search engine?
This Google search pulls up over 200,000 results!
"Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
I dont think the early Nintendo consoles were ever sold in the UK under the "Famicom" brand. As I remember the 8 bit Famicom was sold as the "Nintendo control deck" and the Super Famicom was just sold as the "Super Nintendo Entertainment System", or SNES. So it seems our Scottish vandals are collectors of exotic retro imports.
Oxford Dictionaries Online
Why would it matter 'what the word means'?
It could have the word 'Porterhouse Steak' on it and the reason for the vandalism would be just as senseless.
It could have the word 'Reckless' on it, and a dictionary opened to the page where 'reckless' appears and the word 'reckless' underlined lying on the ground near the vandalism, and it would be just as senseless.
This is just juvenile vandalism. Boring, etc.
A Good Intro to NetBS