Difference between revisions of "Delphine Software International"
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− | {{ | + | {{CompanyBob |
| logo=DelphineSoftwareInternational logo.png | | logo=DelphineSoftwareInternational logo.png | ||
− | + | | founded=1988 | |
− | | founded= | + | | defunct=2004-07 |
− | | defunct= | ||
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| mergedwith= | | mergedwith= | ||
| mergedinto= | | mergedinto= | ||
− | | headquarters= | + | | headquarters=Paris, France |
}} | }} | ||
− | {{sub-stub}}'''Delphine Software International''' | + | {{sub-stub}}'''Delphine Software International''' was a French developer, founded by Paul de Senneville and Paul Cuisset in 1988. It was the video game arm of Senneville's music company, Delphine Records. |
− | + | The company at first developed adventure games for home computers (mainly [[Amiga]] and Atari ST), before achieving great success and breaking into the console games market with the cinematic platformers ''[[Another World]]'' and ''[[Flashback]]''. However they also produced the very poorly received fighting game ''[[Shaq Fu]]''. Afterwards they achieved success again with the ''Moto Racer'' series for Windows and PlayStation. | |
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− | + | They were also the parent company of [[Adeline Software International]], whose core team was sold to Sega and became [[No Cliché]]. Delphine and Adeline were both named after Senneville's daughters. | |
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− | + | Delphine was acquired in 2003 by Doki Denki, which went bankrupt the following year. | |
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− | == | + | ==Softography== |
− | + | {{CompanyHistoryAll|Delphine Software International}} | |
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | {{NECRetro}} | ||
+ | <references /> | ||
[[Category:Third-party software developers]] | [[Category:Third-party software developers]] |
Latest revision as of 16:28, 15 June 2024
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Delphine Software International was a French developer, founded by Paul de Senneville and Paul Cuisset in 1988. It was the video game arm of Senneville's music company, Delphine Records.
The company at first developed adventure games for home computers (mainly Amiga and Atari ST), before achieving great success and breaking into the console games market with the cinematic platformers Another World and Flashback. However they also produced the very poorly received fighting game Shaq Fu. Afterwards they achieved success again with the Moto Racer series for Windows and PlayStation.
They were also the parent company of Adeline Software International, whose core team was sold to Sega and became No Cliché. Delphine and Adeline were both named after Senneville's daughters.
Delphine was acquired in 2003 by Doki Denki, which went bankrupt the following year.
Softography
Mega Drive
- Flashback (1993)
- Another World (1993)
- Shaq Fu (1994)
- The Godfather III (unreleased)
Mega-CD
- Heart of the Alien: Out of this World Parts I and II (1994)
- Flashback (1994)
- Flashback (1995)
- Morphs: Flashback 2 (unreleased)
Saturn
- Fade to Black (unreleased)
Dreamcast
- Flashback (2017)
- Another World HD (2018)
- Fade to Black (2018)
References
NEC Retro has more information related to Delphine Software International
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