Difference between revisions of "Loriciel"
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− | {{ | + | {{CompanyBob |
| logo=Loriciel logo.png | | logo=Loriciel logo.png | ||
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| founded=1983 | | founded=1983 | ||
− | | defunct= | + | | defunct=1994 |
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| mergedwith= | | mergedwith= | ||
| mergedinto= | | mergedinto= | ||
− | | headquarters=France | + | | headquarters=81 Rue de la Procession 92500 Rueil-Malmaison, France |
}} | }} | ||
− | {{sub-stub}}'''Loriciel''', formerly '''Loriciels''', was a French home computer software developer founded in 1983 by Mark Bayle and Laurent Weill.The company | + | {{sub-stub}}'''Loriciel''', formerly '''Loriciels''', was a French home computer software developer founded in 1983 by Mark Bayle and Laurent Weill. The company owed its name to microcomputer Oric-1 (the name is a pun which combines the French word ''logiciel'' = ''software'' and ''oric'', the name of the microcomputer) manufactured by British company Tangerine Computer Systems for which they produced their very first games. |
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− | + | In 1990 the company was forced to abdicate the "S" and change its name to Loriciel due to financial problems. In 1994 the company went bankrupt, and most of its staff moved to [[Virtual Studio]] in an attempt to be "reborn". | |
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− | === | + | ==Softography== |
− | + | {{CompanyHistoryAll|Loriciel|Loriciels}} | |
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+ | ==References== | ||
+ | {{NECRetro}} | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Third-party software developers]] | [[Category:Third-party software developers]] |
Latest revision as of 23:18, 13 November 2024
Loriciel | ||
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Founded: 1983 | ||
Defunct: 1994 | ||
Headquarters:
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This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
Loriciel, formerly Loriciels, was a French home computer software developer founded in 1983 by Mark Bayle and Laurent Weill. The company owed its name to microcomputer Oric-1 (the name is a pun which combines the French word logiciel = software and oric, the name of the microcomputer) manufactured by British company Tangerine Computer Systems for which they produced their very first games.
In 1990 the company was forced to abdicate the "S" and change its name to Loriciel due to financial problems. In 1994 the company went bankrupt, and most of its staff moved to Virtual Studio in an attempt to be "reborn".
Softography
SC-3000
- Kamikaze (1984) (as Loriciels)
- Reversi Champion (1984) (as Loriciels)
- Assembleur Symbolique (1984) (as Loriciels)
- Moniteur Desassembleur (1984) (as Loriciels)
- Crocky (1984) (as Loriciels)
Mega Drive
- Best of the Best: Championship Karate (1993)
- Davis Cup Tennis (1993)
- Jim Power: The Lost Dimension in 3-D (2021)
- Davis Cup II (unreleased)
- Jim Power: The Arcade Game (unreleased)
- Panza Kick Boxing (unreleased)
Game Gear
- Slider (1991)
References
NEC Retro has more information related to Loriciel
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