Difference between revisions of "Proein"

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m (Black Squirrel moved page Proein Soft Line to Proein over redirect: nevermind)
 
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{{CompanyBob
 
{{CompanyBob
| logo=
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| logo=Proein 1990s logo.png
| founded=
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| founded=1973
| defunct=
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| defunct=2009
 
| mergedwith=
 
| mergedwith=
| mergedinto=
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| mergedinto=[[Koch Media]]
 
| headquarters=Spain
 
| headquarters=Spain
 
}}
 
}}
{{sub-stub}}'''Proein Soft Line''' was a Spanish video game publisher.
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{{sub-stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' was a Spanish home computer software publisher founded in 1973. One of the oldest and longest running software publishing companies in Spain, their first contact with videogames was the distribution of home computer titles through his '''Proein Soft Line''', and then also distributed [[Sega]] hardware as '''Proein Electronic'''.
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Thanks to partening with several key companies like [[Activision]], [[Eidos Interactive]] and [[Take Two Interactive]] for the Spanish distribution of their games, it experimented a major grown and consolidation of their business operations in the late nineties, becoming the lead software publishing company in the country which hadn't been created as a local division of a foreign multinational brand.
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The long lasting relationship they established with Eidos was especially lucrative for Proein, as they served as a link for the Spanish developer [[Pyro Studios]] to become a development partner of the British company with their successful ''[[Commandos (Mega Drive)|Commandos]]'' series. This culminated for the Spanish publisher in being acquired in the early 2000s by the British company, which kept its name intact and only reformed their brand image to attach it closer to that of Eidos.
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In 2008, not long before Eidos was acquired by [[Square Enix]], they sold the Spanish publisher to [[Koch Media]]. The Austrian company then merged it whithin its operations in 2009, resulting in the creation of '''Koch Media España'''. {{ref|1=https://www.aventuraycia.com/companias/proein/}} {{ref|1=https://uvejuegos.com/articulo/Visitamos-las-oficinas-de-Proein/49/1}}
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==
{{CompanyHistoryAll|Proein Soft Line}}
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{{CompanyHistoryAll|Proein|Proein Soft Line}}
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==Accessories produced==
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{{CompanyHistoryAll|Proein|Proein Soft Line|type=accessories}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references />
 
<references />
  
[[Category:Third-party software publishers]]
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{{DistributorsEuropeWest}}
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[[Category:Third-party distributors]]

Latest revision as of 03:42, 13 September 2024

https://segaretro.org/images/6/6d/Proein_1990s_logo.png

Proein 1990s logo.png
Proein
Founded: 1973
Defunct: 2009
Merged into: Koch Media
Headquarters:
Spain

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Proein was a Spanish home computer software publisher founded in 1973. One of the oldest and longest running software publishing companies in Spain, their first contact with videogames was the distribution of home computer titles through his Proein Soft Line, and then also distributed Sega hardware as Proein Electronic.

Thanks to partening with several key companies like Activision, Eidos Interactive and Take Two Interactive for the Spanish distribution of their games, it experimented a major grown and consolidation of their business operations in the late nineties, becoming the lead software publishing company in the country which hadn't been created as a local division of a foreign multinational brand.

The long lasting relationship they established with Eidos was especially lucrative for Proein, as they served as a link for the Spanish developer Pyro Studios to become a development partner of the British company with their successful Commandos series. This culminated for the Spanish publisher in being acquired in the early 2000s by the British company, which kept its name intact and only reformed their brand image to attach it closer to that of Eidos.

In 2008, not long before Eidos was acquired by Square Enix, they sold the Spanish publisher to Koch Media. The Austrian company then merged it whithin its operations in 2009, resulting in the creation of Koch Media España. [1] [2]

Softography

Commodore 64

Amstrad CPC

ZX Spectrum

Dreamcast

Accessories produced

Master System

References


Timeline of Sega distributors in Western Europe








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