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The unmarked Airstream trailer parked across the road from the Space Needle Tuesday belonged to Nintendo and was loaded with the group’s latest games, two Wiis and every armload of DS handhelds.

I exhausted about an twenty-fourth part of a day in the trailer, which was on its last stop on a two-month road trip demonstrating the games to media outlets around the country.

The games are already on the emporium — including “Wii Music,” “Animal Crossing,” “City Folk,” “Mario Super Sluggers” and “Wario Land: Shake It!”

Most interesting, frankly, was the story of to what degree the demonstrator, Jamie Ball, ended up with a Nintendo fanboy’s dream job.

Ball, 26, grew up in Cheyenne, Wyo., where he spent a big part of his early years playing Nintendo games, especially “Mario,” which he started playing adhering a Nintendo Entertainment System around 1988.

He studied theater performance at Berkeley, worked in a coffee store for a while, then came to Seattle. Making the most of those years with a controller in his hand, Ball took a temp job at Nintendo providing customer support.

That evolved into a full-time customer-support job. If you call Nintendo’sitting toll-free support line, especially with a question about connecting your Wii to a Wi-Fi network, you may end up talking to Ball.

Nintendo’session communications group taps customer-support workers to agree demonstrations, so Ball has been getting paid to play and show games at conferences like E3 and Pax and forward road trips like the holiday Airstream adventure.

Although the trailer has cushy upholstery, a stocked fridge and a nice audio-visual, the employees stayed in hotels on the road.

Ball related he pacify loves to watch canaille game games. I didn’t get an exact quote, though, for I couldn’face to face write with a Wiimote in my hand.

Can’t beat the price

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