Super Nintendo World opening delayed by Japan's virus outbreak
- Published
The opening of Nintendo's first theme park has been delayed because of rising coronavirus cases in Japan.
Super Nintendo World, modelled on levels of the company's Mario games, had been due to open on 4 February.
But Japan has expanded its state of emergency, due to last until at least 7 February, beyond Tokyo to include Osaka prefecture, where the park is located.
The opening, at Universal Studios Japan, had already been postponed from mid-2020 because of the pandemic.
But in December, Nintendo posted a video tour of the park in December, starring Shigeru Miyamoto, external, the creator of Mario, Zelda, and Donkey Kong, among others.
It is not the first theme park to suffer problems during the pandemic - the shuttered Disneyland theme park in California is set to become a large-scale vaccination centre.
The state of emergency in Japan, which has so far avoided the types of lockdowns seen in the UK and other European nations, prohibits non-essential trips outside the home.
On Tuesday, the country's total number of cases reached 300,000, with more than 4,000 deaths.
And many of those have been in the past three months.
The rising number of cases has also led to some doubts over the fate of the Tokyo Olympics, scheduled for this summer, having already been postponed last year.
Organisers, however, insist the Games will go ahead.
YOUR QUESTIONS: We answer your queries
GLOBAL SPREAD: How many worldwide cases are there?
THE R NUMBER: What it means and why it matters
Related topics
- Published5 January 2021
- Published16 November 2020
- Published5 November 2020
- Published17 September 2020