
(Editor’s note: Videogame DeLorean is a feature in which we’ll take you back to the past to describe and analyze some of our most nostalgic moments in videogaming.)
By all accounts, Ocean Software’s Mission: Impossible for the Nintendo 64 wasn’t a very good game. In fact, it has all the telltale signs of mediocrity, with its awkward controls, frustrating missions that are more trial-and-error than anything else, and ham-fisted AI.
Yet despite its many faults, Mission: Impossible has a special place in Pixelitis editor Patrick Kulikowski's heart because of how many times he rented it as a kid. He considers Mission: Impossible to be one of those awesomely bad licensed movie games. It’s so bad that there’s still fun to be had playing it just because of its quirks.
For example, pumping an enemy full of bullets from an Uzi causes a delayed reaction for a moment before the guy does a full-on backflip – sometimes followed by a fourth wall breaking comment from Ethan Hunt, who exclaims “Yeah, way to go!” It’s hysterical.
Despite its inherent problems, the game does have one particular mission that always stood out thanks to its interesting layout. That mission, is the second level entitled “Embassy Function.”

The rejection is non-final (and even when such rejections are labeled as “final”, the process is far from over, given that there can be, at minimum, an appeal to the Federal Circuit).
Good, as they should! A game mechanic like that shouldn't be locked behind a patent, and Nintendo didn't invent it either.
Nintendo wants to keep wasting money on bullshit lawsuits, real smart in this economy. They should put that money aside for other game projects. On the other hand, I don't care if they waste it all either, and they are screwed in the future maybe that will teach them a lesson.

Nintendo completed its share repurchase and set its secondary offering price at 8,347 yen ahead of March 16 delivery.

Nintendo filed a lawsuit in the United States Court of International Trade.
Nintendo of America is suing the United States government over the sweeping tariffs President Donald Trump put in place last year, according to a complaint filed Friday in the U.S. Court of International Trade and obtained by Aftermath.
LOL I read this on gaff, will they refund the money back to the gamers? highly unlikely. Didn't they just raise prices and pass it onto the gamers? Only Nintendo would send out the Ninjas to the US government.