Difference between revisions of "Kunitake Aoki"

From Sega Retro

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*''[[I'Q Sang 21]]'' (1990, Arcade) [NOTE: Black Jack for arcade]{{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}}
 
*''[[I'Q Sang 21]]'' (1990, Arcade) [NOTE: Black Jack for arcade]{{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}}
 
*''[[Tornado (arcade game)|Tornado]]'' (1992, Arcade){{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}}
 
*''[[Tornado (arcade game)|Tornado]]'' (1992, Arcade){{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}}
*''[[Frog Pond]]'' (1998, Dreamcast){{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}}
+
*''[[Frog Pond]]'' (1998, Dreamcast){{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}}{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20231012153547/http://wasurete.com/games.html}}
 
*Voice chat for Dreamcast (2000){{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}} [NOTE: Possibly related to the [[Dreamcast Microphone]]]
 
*Voice chat for Dreamcast (2000){{ref|https://archive.ph/tdHZb}} [NOTE: Possibly related to the [[Dreamcast Microphone]]]
  

Revision as of 12:53, 12 October 2023

KunitakeAoki.png
Kunitake Aoki
Employment history:
Sega of Japan (1987-04[1] – )
Divisions:
Sega of America (?? – 2001-09[1])
Divisions:
Nintendo (2001-09[1] – 2014-07[1])
Recurrence (2018-01[1] – 2018-09[1])
STEAM for Teens (2017-03[1] – )
EcoSystemOne (2019-01[1] – )
Role(s): Artist
Education: Tokyo Zokei University (Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), Design Management, 1983-1987)[2]

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Kunitake Aoki is a former Sega of Japan and Sega of America artist who began his career in 1987 with arcade games in Japan, switching to consoles with the Sega Genesis in 1992, working on a mix of arcade and console games between 1996 and 2001. He notably led the art team of Sonic the Hedgehog 3[2] and is the original creator of Knuckles the Echidna[1].

After leaving Sega in 2001, he was employed by the US-based Nintendo Software Technology Corporation, where he mainly produced artwork for Nintendo DS titles, most notably the Mario vs. Donkey Kong series which he developer for 11 years[1][3]. He left Nintendo in 2014 and in 2017 founded STEAM for Teens, where he provides STEM courses to teenagers[1][3].

Aliases

In the 80s, on the rare occasion he was credited for his work on an arcade game, Kunitake Aoki used the name KAO. Years later he would incorporate these initials into his email address.

Production history

Games

Music

External links

References