Difference between revisions of "Hiroshi Hamagaki"
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− | {{sub-stub}}'''Hiroshi "Sada" Hamagaki'''{{ref|https://www.mobygames.com/person/61224/hiroshi-hamagaki/shots/23744/}} (浜垣 博志) is the president and CEO of [[Genki]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20210812005849/https://ascii.jp/elem/000/000/345/345578/}} and a former artist and director at [[Sega of Japan]] who worked in [[Yu Suzuki]]'s team. He and programmer [[Tomoharu Kimura]] left Sega to found | + | {{sub-stub}}'''Hiroshi "Sada" Hamagaki'''{{ref|https://www.mobygames.com/person/61224/hiroshi-hamagaki/shots/23744/}} (浜垣 博志) is the president and CEO of [[Genki]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20210812005849/https://ascii.jp/elem/000/000/345/345578/}} and a former artist and director at [[Sega of Japan]] who worked in [[Yu Suzuki]]'s team. He and programmer [[Tomoharu Kimura]] left Sega to found Genki in 1990, where there are best known for the ''[[Tokyo Xtreme Racer]]'' series{{ref|https://archive.ph/wip/dHndm|https://web.archive.org/web/20231213212906/https://twitter.com/sadajpe1}}. |
==Production history== | ==Production history== |
Revision as of 09:58, 18 December 2023
Hiroshi Hamagaki |
---|
Employment history: Sega Enterprises (?? – 1990)
Divisions:
Genki (1990 – )
|
Role(s): Artist, Director, Executive |
Twitter: @sadajpe1 |
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Hiroshi "Sada" Hamagaki[1] (浜垣 博志) is the president and CEO of Genki[2] and a former artist and director at Sega of Japan who worked in Yu Suzuki's team. He and programmer Tomoharu Kimura left Sega to found Genki in 1990, where there are best known for the Tokyo Xtreme Racer series[3].
Production history
- Bullfight (System 1; 1984)
- My Hero (System 1; 1985)
- Hang-On (Hang-On hardware; 1985) — Chief Artist
- Super Hang-On (Hang-On hardware; 1987) — Director
- After Burner (X Board; 1987) (as Sada)
- After Burner II (X Board; 1987) (as Sada)
- Power Drift (Y Board; 1988) — Staff
- Dynamite Dux (System 16; 1988) — Special Thanks[4] (as sada "monster of marsh")
- Turbo OutRun (OutRun hardware; 1989) — Sp. Thanks (as Sada)
- Sword of Vermilion (Mega Drive; 1989) — Director (as Sada)
- Sword of Vermilion (Mega Drive; 1989) — Game Design (as Sada)
- Sword of Vermilion (Mega Drive; 1989) — Map Design (as Sada)
- G-LOC: Air Battle (Y Board; 1990)
- Defenders of Oasis (Game Gear; 1992) — Graphic Design[5] (as Sada)
- Metal Fangs (Mega Drive; 1993) — Assistant[6] (as H.H)
- A/X-101 (Mega-CD; 1994) — CG Art[7] (as Sada)
- Robotica: Cybernation Revolt (Saturn; 1995) — Rendering[8]
- Hang-On GP (Saturn; 1995) — Special Thanks[9]
- Virtua Fighter 3tb (Dreamcast; 1998) — Special Thanks
- Tokyo Xtreme Racer (Dreamcast; 1999) — Executive Producer
- Daytona USA 2001 (Dreamcast; 2000) — Special Thanks
References
- ↑ https://www.mobygames.com/person/61224/hiroshi-hamagaki/shots/23744/
- ↑ https://ascii.jp/elem/000/000/345/345578/ (Wayback Machine: 2021-08-12 00:58)
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20231213212906/https://twitter.com/sadajpe1 (archive.today)
- ↑ File:DynamiteDux arcade credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Defenders of Oasis GG credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Metal Fangs MD credits.pdf
- ↑ File:AX101 MCD JP SSCredits.pdf
- ↑ File:Deadalus Saturn JP SSEnding.pdf
- ↑ File:Hang-On GP Saturn credits.pdf