McDonald's eCrew Development Program (found McDonald's Japan Nintendo DS training game; 2010): Difference between revisions

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In mid-2020, a [https://web.archive.org/web/20200530070256/https://page.auctions.yahoo.co.jp/jp/auction/e416813154 Yahoo Japan auction for the game] appeared online. Its starting price was 400,000 yen (about $3,855 in US dollars), which was later lowered.
In mid-2020, a [https://web.archive.org/web/20200530070256/https://page.auctions.yahoo.co.jp/jp/auction/e416813154 Yahoo Japan auction for the game] appeared online. Its starting price was 400,000 yen (about $3,855 in US dollars), which was later lowered.


On November 18th, 2020, YouTuber Nick Robinson shared a video (below), where he revealed that he won the auction. He dumped the entire game onto the Internet Archive [https://archive.org/details/mcdonalds-japan-ecdp-rom-training-nintendo-ds-cartridge-dump here.]
On November 18th, 2020, YouTuber Nick Robinson shared a video (below) where he revealed that he won the auction. He dumped the entire game onto the Internet Archive [https://archive.org/details/mcdonalds-japan-ecdp-rom-training-nintendo-ds-cartridge-dump here.]


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 23:10, 23 November 2020

The game's title screen.

Status: Found

Date found: 18 Nov 2020

Found by: Nick Robinson

McDonald's eCrew Development Program is a game used by Japanese McDonald's to train their employees.

History

In 2010, McDonald's Japan collaborated with Nintendo to create eCrew Development Program, a Nintendo DS game to train new employees. The game received some media coverage, but it was only given to McDonald's Japan employees and required a password to play.

In December 2018, a thread was started on the AssemblerGames website by user Code1038, who had bought the game cartridge years earlier. Code1038 was stuck on a password entry page and could not progress past that point.

In mid-2020, a Yahoo Japan auction for the game appeared online. Its starting price was 400,000 yen (about $3,855 in US dollars), which was later lowered.

On November 18th, 2020, YouTuber Nick Robinson shared a video (below) where he revealed that he won the auction. He dumped the entire game onto the Internet Archive here.

Gallery

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EmbedVideo is missing a required parameter.

External Links