Difference between revisions of "Namco"
From Sega Retro
SEGAAA2004 (talk | contribs) |
SEGAAA2004 (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Company== | ==Company== | ||
− | Namco published a number of their console titles in North America through [[Namco Hometek]], the home console game division of Namco-America. Announcements for the end of repairs for some of their arcade games were sent out in July 2015{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20240408215217/https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E3818AE79FA5E38289E3819B20150722-E4BF9DE5AE88E5AFB.pdf}}, as well as on August 2, 2017{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20231011062137/https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E4BF9DE5AE88E7B582E4BA86E6A188E58685EFBC88E59BBDE5.pdf}} and October 2, 2017.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20230527230037/https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E4BF9DE5AE88E7B582E4BA86E383AAE382B9E38388_2017100.pdf}} In Europe and Australia, Namco previously licensed out their console titles to other publishers as the company's Namco Europe division lacked a in-house publishing branch. | + | Namco published a number of their console titles in North America through [[Namco Hometek]], the home console game division of Namco-America. Announcements for the end of repairs for some of their arcade games were sent out in July 2015{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20240408215217/https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E3818AE79FA5E38289E3819B20150722-E4BF9DE5AE88E5AFB.pdf}}, as well as on August 2, 2017{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20231011062137/https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E4BF9DE5AE88E7B582E4BA86E6A188E58685EFBC88E59BBDE5.pdf}} and October 2, 2017.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20230527230037/https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E4BF9DE5AE88E7B582E4BA86E383AAE382B9E38388_2017100.pdf}} In Europe and Australia, Namco previously licensed out their console titles to other publishers and distributors as the company's Namco Europe division lacked a in-house publishing branch. |
==Softography== | ==Softography== |
Revision as of 13:48, 20 July 2024
Namco | ||
---|---|---|
Founded: 1955-06-01 | ||
Defunct: 2006-03-31 | ||
T-series code: T-14 | ||
Merged with: Bandai (2005) | ||
Headquarters:
| ||
2006-03-31
|
This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.
Namco (ナムコ) was a Japanese company best know for their arcade classics such as Pac-Man.
The company suffered financial issues between the late 1990s and early 2000s due to the struggling Japanese economy and diminishing arcade market, which led to the company merging with Bandai in 2005 to become Bandai Namco Holdings, though still continued to publish games until then. Namco also distributed their own Sega NAOMI and Sega Chihiro systems and was one of the three Triforce partners (along with Sega and Nintendo).
Contents
Company
Namco published a number of their console titles in North America through Namco Hometek, the home console game division of Namco-America. Announcements for the end of repairs for some of their arcade games were sent out in July 2015[1], as well as on August 2, 2017[2] and October 2, 2017.[3] In Europe and Australia, Namco previously licensed out their console titles to other publishers and distributors as the company's Namco Europe division lacked a in-house publishing branch.
Softography
Electro-mechanical arcade
- Periscope (1966)
Arcade
- Gee Bee (1978)
SG-1000
- Sega-Galaga (1984)
Master System
- Pac-Mania (1991)
- Ms. Pac-Man (1991)
Mega Drive
- Phelios (1990)
- Klax (1990)
- Burning Force (1990)
- Megapanel (1990)
- Dangerous Seed (1990)
- Pac-Mania (1991)
- Powerball (1991)
- Fushigi no Umi no Nadia (1991)
- Marvel Land (1991)
- Ms. Pac-Man (1991)
- Kyuukai Douchuuki (1991)
- Rolling Thunder 2 (1991)
- Splatterhouse 2 (1992)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Waku Waku Shopping (1992)
- Splatterhouse 3 (1993)
- Ball Jacks (1993)
- Pac-Man 2: The New Adventures (1994)
- Pac-Attack (1994)
Game Gear
- Pac-Man (1991)
- Batter Up (1991)
- Mappy (1991)
- Wagyan Land (1991)
- Galaga '91 (1991)
- Pocket Jansou (1992)
- Ms. Pac-Man (1993)
- Pac-Attack (1994)
- Gear Stadium Heiseiban (1995)
Mega-CD
- StarBlade (1994)
Saturn
- Sankyo Fever Jikki Simulation S Vol. 2 (1998)
- Cyber Sled (unreleased)
NAOMI
- Ninja Assault (2000)
- World Kicks (2000)
- Shin Nihon Pro Wrestling Toukon Retsuden 4 Arcade Edition (2000)
- Gun Survivor 2: Biohazard CODE:Veronica (2001)
- Mazan: Flash of the Blade (2002)
Dreamcast
- SoulCalibur Tentou Taikenban (1999)
- SoulCalibur (1999)
- SoulCalibur Tokubetsu Taikenban (199x)
- Time Crisis II (unreleased)
Triforce
- Mario Kart Arcade GP (2005)
- Star Fox (unreleased)
Chihiro
- Wangan Midnight: Maximum Tune (2003)
- Wangan Midnight: Maximum Tune 2 (2004)
Gallery
References
- ↑ https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E3818AE79FA5E38289E3819B20150722-E4BF9DE5AE88E5AFB.pdf (Wayback Machine: 2024-04-08 21:52)
- ↑ https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E4BF9DE5AE88E7B582E4BA86E6A188E58685EFBC88E59BBDE5.pdf (Wayback Machine: 2023-10-11 06:21)
- ↑ https://www.banasupport.net/cms-files/E4BF9DE5AE88E7B582E4BA86E383AAE382B9E38388_2017100.pdf (Wayback Machine: 2023-05-27 23:00)
NEC Retro has more information related to Namco
|