Difference between revisions of "Nex Entertainment"

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'''Nex Entertainment''' (ネクスエンタテインメント) is a game development studio founded in 1992 primarily as Emarg. They developed games under contract for various companies, such as [[Sega]], [[Takara]], [[Capcom]], and [[Namco]]. They changed name to '''Nextech''' (ネクステック)  by March 1994, around the time they purchased [[Gau Entertainment]]. In August 1997, Sega acquired the studio as a wholly-owned subsidiary, though they continued to contract to other companies. They took their current name in July 2005, and Sega spun them out back to independence in November.
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'''Nex Entertainment''' (ネクスエンタテインメント) is a game development studio founded in 1992 primarily as Emarg. They developed games under contract for various companies, such as [[Sega]], [[Takara]], [[Capcom]], and [[Namco]]. They changed their name to '''Nextech Co., Ltd.''' (ネクステック)  by March 1994, around the time they purchased [[Gau Entertainment]].
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In August 1997, Sega acquired the studio as a wholly-owned subsidiary, though they continued to contract to other companies. They took their current name in July 2005, and Sega spun them out back to independence in November.
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==

Latest revision as of 17:36, 15 November 2024

https://segaretro.org/images/3/30/NexEntertainment_logo.png

NexEntertainment logo.png
Nex Entertainment
Founded: 1992-09-28 (as Emarg)
Headquarters:
3-3-2, Shibuya, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo 150, Japan[1]

Nex Entertainment (ネクスエンタテインメント) is a game development studio founded in 1992 primarily as Emarg. They developed games under contract for various companies, such as Sega, Takara, Capcom, and Namco. They changed their name to Nextech Co., Ltd. (ネクステック) by March 1994, around the time they purchased Gau Entertainment.

In August 1997, Sega acquired the studio as a wholly-owned subsidiary, though they continued to contract to other companies. They took their current name in July 2005, and Sega spun them out back to independence in November.

Softography

Mega Drive

Saturn

NAOMI

Dreamcast

PlayStation 2

Nintendo DS

PlayStation 3

Nintendo Switch Online

External links

References

  1. http://www.sega.co.jp/sega_e/corp/kaisha/group.html (Wayback Machine: 1997-02-16 12:30)


Timeline of Sega of Japan research and development divisions








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