Difference between revisions of "Renovation Products"

From Sega Retro

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==Softography==
 
==Softography==
{{multicol|
+
{{CompanyHistoryAll|Renovation Products}}
===[[Mega Drive]]===
 
* ''[[Arrow Flash]]'' (developed by [[Sega]]; 1990)
 
* ''[[Final Zone]]'' (1990)
 
* ''[[Gaiares]]'' (1990)
 
* ''[[Granada]]'' (1990)
 
* ''[[Whip Rush]]'' (developed by [[VIC Tokai]]; 1990)
 
* ''[[Arcus Odyssey]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Beast Wrestler]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Dino Land]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[El Viento]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Exile]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Gain Ground]]'' (developed by [[Sega]]; 1991)
 
* ''[[Master of Monsters]]'' (developed by [[SystemSoft]]/[[Toshiba EMI]]; 1991)
 
* ''[[Todd's Adventures in Slime World]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Vapor Trail: Hyper Offence Formation]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Valis III]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Valis: The Phantasm Soldier]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Ys III: Wanderers from Ys]]'' (1991)
 
* ''[[Earnest Evans]]'' (1992)
 
* ''[[Jennifer Capriati Tennis]]'' (1992)
 
* ''[[Sol-Deace]]'' (1992)
 
* ''[[Syd of Valis]]'' (1992)
 
* ''[[Traysia]]'' (1992)
 
* ''[[Elemental Master]]'' (developed by [[Tecnosoft]]; 1993)
 
 
 
===[[Mega-CD]]===
 
* ''[[Revenge of the Ninja]]'' (1993)
 
* ''[[Road Avenger]]'' (1993)
 
* ''[[Time Gal]]'' (1993)
 
}}
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references />
 
<references />
 
[[Category:Third-party software publishers]]
 
[[Category:Third-party software publishers]]

Revision as of 18:06, 17 January 2020

https://retrocdn.net/images/0/04/RenovationProducts_logo.png

RenovationProducts logo.png
Renovation Products
Founded: 1989
Defunct: 1993
Merged into: Sega (1993)
Headquarters:
United States

Renovation Products was Telenet Japan's US publisher of Sega Mega Drive games, publishing both Telenet's own games and several non-Telenet Japan titles. When Telenet stopped developing on Sega's systems in 1993, Sega acquired the studio (though not before publishing a single SNES game, Telenet's Doomsday Warrior) and they promptly disappeared.

Very few of Renovation's games were released in Europe, however a deal was at one point struck with Ubisoft for distribution in that region[1]. No games were officially released, however, and Ubisoft themselves did not publish a game for Mega Drive hardware until Street Racer in 1995.

President Hideaki Irie would later become COO of Sega of America[2][3].

Softography

References

  1. Sega Pro, "December 1991" (UK; 1991-11-21), page 9
  2. @gdri on Twitter (Wayback Machine: 2018-05-18 21:25)
  3. @gdri on Twitter (Wayback Machine: 2018-05-18 21:38)