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Howard And Nester Comic Archive

Via Press the Buttons, a page that has scans of the classic Nintendo Power comic series Howard and Nester. From the page: "Anyone who has read Nintendo Power since its beginning has, obviously, at least glanced at the little comic strips in a couple of pages of the magazine called "Howard & Nester", which chronicled the adventures of bowtie-wearing Howard Philips (who was an actual employee of Nintendo and president of the Nintendo Fun Club at the time) and a stubborn redheaded teen named Nester." I, um, recall them being a lot funnier when I was a kid. The Maniac Mansion comic is still pretty cool, though.

5 of 38 comments (clear)

  1. The real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does anyone have scans of all the "special" comics that they used to put in Nintendo Power? Like the Zelda and Mario ones when Super Mario World and Link to the Past came out? Or the Star Fox comic or the Super Metroid comic? Those were rather quality.

  2. Re:The Pope dies... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You missed the nexus. I can't recall a day when every slashdot post was about gaming.

    Thanks for biting though... br.

    --
    "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
  3. News? by Mekabyte · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While this is a cool site, I don't know how this qualifies as news. A quick check of the last modified date shows: Monday, December 02, 2002 04:40:17.

  4. Howard Phillips by MilenCent · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Once upon a time Howard Phillips ("President of the Nintendo Fun Club" and the real-life inspiration for one half of the Howard and Nester comic) was the public face of Nintendo to its primary customers. He was a bow-tie-wearing emblem of an era when Nintendo gave away free newsletters (Fun Club Times, the free predecessor to Nintendo Power), when Nintendo Power itself didn't suck (their articles were sometimes as complete as a full player's guide these days - NP published full maps for Metroid and the original Zelda) and ran a fully-staffed "game councilor" hotline that was an ordinary toll call instead of one of those 1-900 things.

    After he quit, sometimes Nintendo Power would publish a blurb whenever he changed jobs. I got the sense that there was some real fondness for him behind the scenes at Nintendo. What he's doing now, however, I have no idea.

    As for Nester... when Phillips left Nintendo, the strip was retitled Nester's Adventures and continued, but it didn't last long. (Thankfully... the H&N comics, while not awful, weren't actually what I'd call good, either, and they didn't improve after Phillips left.)

    There were actually a grand total, to my knowledge, of two video game references to the strip:
    1. When Nintendo published Dragon Warrior in this country, they also handled the translation job from the original Dragon Quest. They actually rewrote some of the dialogue, including renaming two slightly-hard-to-find characters "Howard" and "Nester," each looking for the other on the outermost, opposite corners of one of the towns. (Don't try looking for them in the GBA release of
    the game, as it was completely retranslated.)
    2. One of the few titles released for the ill-fated Virtual Boy system was a Nester-starring game, Nester's Funky Bowling. I've never played it, but even if it was pure gaming gold, it still spiraled on down the commode when the Virtual Boy tanked.

    1. Re:Howard Phillips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      What he's doing now, however, I have no idea.

      I had forgot about these comics completely, but seeing this slashdot story reminded me of how confused I was how the Howard character just left so suddenly and cryptically (i was still a kid).

      Anyhow, was very curious to see what happened to this guy.... a quick googling shows that he now works for Microsoft Game Studios. Unknown what his signifigance there is though. It could be a completely different guy just named "Howard Phillips".