Difference between revisions of "Adeline Software International"

From Sega Retro

(Adeline Software International page as independent from No Cliché)
Tag: Removed redirect
Line 12: Line 12:
  
 
Years after the apparent demise of Adeline, the brand was revived in 2002 by Delphine. However, no members from the original Adeline staff were involved in the development. After working on a couple of [[Game Boy Advance]] projects, the cease of operations of its parent company Delphine in July 2004 also marked the definitive end for Adeline.
 
Years after the apparent demise of Adeline, the brand was revived in 2002 by Delphine. However, no members from the original Adeline staff were involved in the development. After working on a couple of [[Game Boy Advance]] projects, the cease of operations of its parent company Delphine in July 2004 also marked the definitive end for Adeline.
 +
 +
Delphine and Adeline were both named after the daughters of Delphine's co-founder, Paul de Senneville.
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==

Revision as of 11:41, 22 January 2024

https://segaretro.org/images/8/87/Adeline_Software_International_logo.png

Adeline Software International logo.png
Adeline Software International
Founded: 1993-02
Defunct: July 2004
Headquarters:
Lyon, France

Adeline Software International was a video game developer founded in February 1993 as a subsidiary company of Delphine Software International, and based in Lyon, France. The team mostly came from Infogrames, another French video game company, after a disagreement about sequels of the Alone in the Dark bestseller.

The company employed 21 people including graphic artists, developers and musicians. Five members made up the core of the team: Frédérick Raynal (creative director), Yaël Barroz (computer artist in charge of scenery), Didier Chanfray (artistic director), Serge Plagnol (technical director), and Laurent Salmeron (resource manager). After the release of Little Big Adventure 2 in 1997, the company slowly went quiet, and in July, the core team was sold to Sega, becoming No Cliché and leaving Adeline as an empty group within Delphine, which still did some legacy conversion work outsourced to external developers like the late Sega Saturn version of Time Commando.

Years after the apparent demise of Adeline, the brand was revived in 2002 by Delphine. However, no members from the original Adeline staff were involved in the development. After working on a couple of Game Boy Advance projects, the cease of operations of its parent company Delphine in July 2004 also marked the definitive end for Adeline.

Delphine and Adeline were both named after the daughters of Delphine's co-founder, Paul de Senneville.

Softography

References